Mike Ludwig, Truthout.org
October 2017
The US leads the world in meat production. One-third of all land in the continental US is used to grow feed and provide pasture for animals that will be killed for meat.
Chemicals called nitrates and other pollutants can contaminate drinking water sources when fertilizer and manure drain from poorly protected agricultural fields. Drinking water supplies for roughly 200 million Americans in 49 states have some level of nitrate contamination, but the highest levels are found in rural towns surrounded by industrial farms, according to the Environmental Working Group.
Scientists recently announced that the "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico,
an area the size of New Jersey where oxygen levels are too low to sustain
most forms of life, is larger than ever. For years, environmentalists have
used annual surveys of the dead zone to bring attention to large amounts of
agricultural pollution from the nation's breadbasket that flows down the
Mississippi River and fuels oxygen-depleting algae blooms in the Gulf.
This year, the message is hitting much closer to home, especially for those
living near farmlands.
A new report from the Environmental Working Group shows that the
agricultural pollution causing the dead zone is also contaminating drinking
water supplies for millions of Americans with potentially dangerous
chemicals. Environmental groups particularly blame large-scale meat
production, which require huge supplies of industrially grown corn and soy
to raise animals to satisfy the nation's appetite for cheap meat.
The US leads the world in meat production. One-third of all land in the
continental US is used to grow feed and provide pasture for animals that
will be killed for meat, according to the environmental group Mighty Earth.
Now that agricultural pollution's impact on drinking water is coming into
focus, meat producers such as Tyson Foods are under pressure to set
standards that would require large farms in their supply chains to clean up
their acts.
"People just naturally pay more attention to the pollution issue in their
own backyard than they do [to] pollution issues thousands of miles away,"
said Matt Rota, senior policy director at the Gulf Restoration Network, a
group that works to reduce pollution in the Gulf South.
Chemicals called nitrates and other pollutants can contaminate drinking
water sources when fertilizer and manure drain from poorly protected
agricultural fields. Drinking water supplies for roughly 200 million
Americans in 49 states have some level of nitrate contamination, but the
highest levels are found in rural towns surrounded by industrial farms,
according to the Environmental Working Group.
Runoff from farm fields finds its way from rural watersheds to the Gulf,
providing nutrients for summertime algae blooms that force fish to migrate
and kill off smaller creatures at the bottom of the food chain. The dead
zone spanned 8,777 square miles off the coast of Louisiana and Texas when
marine scientists measured it over the past summer.
Agricultural Pollution Is a Threat to Public Health
Nitrates are naturally found in soil and water, but high levels of exposure
have been linked to birth defects, cancer and a dangerous condition known as
blue baby syndrome in infants, which results from low levels of oxygen in
the blood. Few water supplies in the US have levels of nitrates above the
federal limit of 10 parts per million, which was set 25 years ago to prevent
blue baby syndrome, but studies have found that the risk of cancer increases
at levels as low as 5 parts per million.
Treating polluted water is expensive, and drinking water utilities often use
chlorine and other disinfecting treatments when agricultural pollution
contaminates sources of drinking water with manure and other pollutants.
When these treatment chemicals interact with plant and animal waste, they
create potentially dangerous byproducts such as trihalomethanes (THMs), a
group of chemicals linked to liver, kidney and intestinal tumors in animals,
according to the Environmental Working Group.
The EPA sets limits on the amount of THMs allowed in drinking water, but
environmentalists say those limits were based on the technical feasibility
of removing the chemicals, not concerns over their long-term toxicity. In
2010, state scientists in California estimated that levels 100 times lower
the legal limit would pose a one-in-a-million lifetime risk of cancer.
Nationwide, water supplies in 1,647 communities, serving 4.4 million people,
are contaminated with THMs in amounts at least 75 times higher than
California's one-in-a-million cancer risk level. In 2014 and 2015, 411 of
those communities had levels of THMs at or above the EPA's limits, and
two-thirds were found in five states with high levels of agricultural
pollution -- Louisiana, California, Oklahoma, Missouri and Texas. (You can
find out if THMs and other pollutants are in your water supply using this
database.)
Craig Cox, the Environmental Working Group's vice president for agriculture
and natural resources, said farmers can take simple steps to reduce
agricultural runoff, but too few farmers are taking action. Agricultural
trade groups have considerable political clout in Washington, and farmers
are exempt from many state and federal environmental regulations. A federal
program pays billions of dollars a year to farmers that adopt conservation
practices; however, that money does not always support the best pollution
control methods.
"Decades of ill-conceived federal farm policy has been a driving factor in
this situation we have today that puts millions of American families at risk
of drinking tap water contaminated with these dangerous pollutants," Cox
said in a statement.
Activists Target Meat Mega-Producers
Environmentalists in the Gulf spent years fighting for tougher regulation of
industrial farming to protect waterways from runoff and ultimately reduce
the size of the dead zone, even filing an unsuccessful lawsuit against the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for failing to act during the Obama
administration. The EPA did introduce eight policy guidelines to help states
reduce fertilizer pollution in 2011, but no states have implemented more
than two of them because the program is largely voluntarily, according to
the Mississippi River Collaborative.
Now that the Trump administration is in charge, prospects for establishing
tougher standards are slim at best.
"I don't have a whole lot of confidence that the feds will be taking
stronger steps to make sure that nitrogen pollution isn't getting into our
drinking [water] supply," Rota told Truthout.
Unable to change farming practices with regulation, activists are now
focusing on brand-name companies that buy from industrial farms. Mighty
Earth recently mapped high levels of nitrates in Midwestern waterways and
found that supply chains for major meat companies were responsible for much
of the fertilizer pollution. Tyson Foods, which produces roughly 20 percent
of the country's meat supply through brands, such as Jimmy Dean, Hillshire
Farms, Ball Park and Sara Lee, stood out from the rest, with major
processing facilities in all five states that are top contributors to
pollution in the Gulf.
Activists across the country are now calling on Tyson directly, demanding
that the company pressure its subsidiaries and suppliers to clean up their
acts. Audrey Beedle, a community organizer with the Clean It Up Tyson
campaign in Louisiana, said that Tyson's new CEO has shown interest in
sustainability, and activists see an opening to hold the company to task.
Unlike individual farmers, large companies like Tyson are more responsive to
pressure from consumers.
"They are a household name; everybody knows Tyson," Beedle said in an
interview. "People want to know what's in their food. They are sick of
unchecked corporations."
Activists say there are several methods farms can use to prevent
agricultural runoff, including rotating crops with small grains, planting
cover crops, optimizing fertilizer applications to prevent runoff and using
conservation tillage practices. They are also calling for a moratorium on
the further clearing of native prairie ecosystems for industrial farming.
Tyson, which runs meat packaging and processing plants, not farms, claims
it's "misleading" to single out one company when water pollution is a
problem across the agriculture industry. Nearly 40 percent of corn, for
example, is grown to produce ethanol, not meat. In a statement to Truthout,
Tyson said that real change on this issue requires "a broad coalition of
stakeholders," and the company is working with trade associations and
researchers to "promote continuous improvement in how we and our suppliers
operate."
Rota said individual farmers generally don't want to cause problems in their
own communities or downstream. He thinks they will do the right thing if
they are provided with the right solutions and held accountable.
"Farmers aren't bad people, and I don't know of any farmer who goes out to
say, 'I'm going to pollute other people's drinking water,'" Rota said. "But
they are business people, and they need to be responsible for their
businesses."
Number of animals killed in the world by the fishing, meat, dairy and egg industries, since you opened this webpage.
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