Biofuels may expand ‘dead zone’

2007-12-27

Richard Moore

Original source URL:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22301669/


  MSNBC.com

Corn boom may expand 'dead zone'
Farmers say crop too profitable to stop, despite problems downstream
The Associated Press
updated 5:45 p.m. ET Dec. 17, 2007

JEFFERSON, Iowa - Because of rising demand for ethanol, American farmers are 
growing more corn than at any time since World War II. And sea life in the Gulf 
of Mexico is paying the price.

The nation's corn crop is fertilized with millions of pounds of nitrogen-based 
fertilizer. And when that nitrogen runs off fields in Corn Belt states, it makes
its way to the Mississippi River and eventually pours into the Gulf, where it 
contributes to a growing "dead zone" ‹ a 7,900-square-mile patch so depleted of 
oxygen that fish, crabs and shrimp suffocate.

The dead zone was discovered in 1985 and has grown fairly steadily since then, 
forcing fishermen to venture farther and farther out to sea to find their catch.
For decades, fertilizer has been considered the prime cause of the lifeless 
spot.

With demand for corn booming, some researchers fear the dead zone will expand 
rapidly, with devastating consequences.

"We might be coming close to a tipping point," said Matt Rota, director of the 
water resources program for the New Orleans-based Gulf Restoration Network, an 
environmental group. "The ecosystem might change or collapse as opposed to being
just impacted."

Environmentalists had hoped to cut nitrogen runoff by encouraging farmers to 
apply less fertilizer and establish buffers along waterways. But the demand for 
the corn-based fuel additive ethanol has driven up the price for the crop, which
is selling for about $4 per bushel, up from a little more than $2 in 2002.

That enticed American farmers ‹ mostly in Iowa, Illinois, Minnesota, North 
Dakota and South Dakota ‹ to plant more than 93 million acres of corn in 2007, 
the most since 1944. They substituted corn for other crops, or made use of land 
not previously in cultivation.

Farmer: 'Try to be a good steward'

Corn is more "leaky" than crops such as soybean and alfalfa ‹ that is, it 
absorbs less nitrogen per acre. The prime reasons are the drainage systems used 
in corn fields and the timing of when the fertilizer is applied.

The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that up to 210 million pounds of 
nitrogen fertilizer enter the Gulf of Mexico each year. Scientists had no 
immediate estimate for 2007, but said they expect the amount of fertilizer going
into streams to increase with more acres of corn planted.

"Corn agriculture practices release a lot of nitrogen," said Donald Scavia, a 
University of Michigan professor who has studied corn fertilizer's effect on the
dead zone. "More corn equals more nitrogen pollution."

Farmers realize the connection between their crop and problems downstream, but 
with the price of corn soaring, it doesn't make sense to grow anything else. And
growing corn isn't profitable without nitrogen-based fertilizer.

"I think you have to try to be a good steward of the land," said Jerry Peckumn, 
who farms corn and soybeans on about 2,000 acres he owns or leases near the Iowa
community of Jefferson. "But on the other hand, you can't ignore the price of 
corn."

Peckumn grows alfalfa and natural grass on the 220 or so acres he owns, but said
he cannot afford to experiment on the land he rents.

The dead zone typically begins in the spring and persists into the summer. Its 
size and location vary each year because of currents, weather and other factors,
but it is generally near the mouth of the Mississippi.

This year, it is the third-biggest on record. It was larger in 2002 and 2001, 
when it covered 8,500 and 8,006 square miles respectively.

Soil erosion, sewage and industrial pollution also contribute to the dead zone, 
but fertilizer is believed to be the chief factor.

Fertilizer causes explosive growth of algae, which then dies and sinks to the 
bottom, where it sucks up oxygen as it decays. This creates a deep layer of 
oxygen-depleted ocean where creatures either escape or die.

Marine life struggle to survive

Bottom-dwelling species such as crabs and oysters are most at risk, said 
Michelle Perez, an analyst with the Washington-based Environmental Working 
Group. "They struggle to survive," Perez said. "They can't swim away."

Crabbers complained at a meeting in Louisiana earlier this year that they pulled
up bucket upon bucket of dead crabs.

Rota warned that if the corn boom continues, the Gulf of Mexico could see an 
"ecological regime change." The fear is that the zone will grow so big that most
sea life won't be able to escape it, leading to an even bigger die-off.

"People's livelihood depends on the shrimp, fish and crabs in these waters," he 
said. "Already, some of these shrimpers are traveling longer and longer 
distances to catch anything."

Given the market pressure to grow corn, the Natural Resources Defense Council 
and others argue that the nation needs a comprehensive, federal approach to the 
problem.

Among the ideas floated: rules to force farmers to use fertilizers with more 
care, and the establishment of buffer zones to contain runoff.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not 
be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22301669/

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