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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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    As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say

    Bama Diva
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    price - As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say Empty As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say

    Post by Bama Diva Fri 16 Feb 2024, 7:37 am

    As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say

    The net zero climate agenda is pushing regulations and costs onto farmers, which translate to costlier food items for Americans.


    February 15, 2024
    Updated:
    February 15, 2024

    As inflation remains stubbornly high, farmers throughout the Western world are warning that cost increases from the net zero movement will drive food prices still higher, while simultaneously putting many smaller farmers out of business.

    January inflation numbers showed that prices increased by 3.1 percent over what they were a year ago, indicating that the fight against inflation, while progressing, has not been won.
    Overall, prices have surged by nearly 18 percent since January 2021 when President Joe Biden took office.

    Americans are struggling in an economy in which, by official statistics, nearly one-fifth of the value of their dollars has evaporated in three years—though many will say the cost of food and other essentials has become more expensive than what the official numbers state.

    The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), which tracks food prices, offers an optimistic assessment of the coming year. After having gone up 9.9 percent in 2022, the USDA states, “[food] prices grew more slowly in 2023,” increasing by only 5.8 percent.

    “Food prices are expected to continue to decelerate in 2024,” the USDA projects.



    While some predict that the worst is behind us, analysts of the U.S. farming industry say there is another round of price inflation in the works, which will come from the Biden administration’s “whole of government” effort to reduce global temperatures.

    A recent report by the Buckeye Institute attempts to quantify the cost of Bidenomics to farmers.
    price - As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say Image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimg.theepochtimes.com%2Fassets%2Fuploads%2F2024%2F02%2F15%2Fid5588211-1
    The report, titled “Net-Zero Climate-Control Policies Will Fail the Farm,” projects that farmers will see costs rise by at least 34 percent, which will increase the household grocery bill for an American family of four by more than $1,300 per year.

    “Complying with net-zero emissions policies and corporate ESG reporting requirements will increase prices of farm inputs, the costs of which will ultimately be passed onto consumers at grocery stores and restaurants,” the report states.

    “This is where the left is going, trying to get to net zero,” Rea Hederman, executive director of the Buckeye Institute’s economic research center, told The Epoch Times. And the costs imposed on farmers are in addition to price hikes from inflation, weather, or other factors that typically impact food prices.

    “The fact that the federal government printed too much money, this is on top of that,” Mr. Hederman said, “and it’s a sustained increase, not a temporary fluctuation in food prices, because you’re building higher baseline operating costs that are going to be permanent for farmers going forward.”

    The report analyzed an average U.S. farm, which is about 700 acres in size, producing corn. It then summed the costs of complying with net zero mandates, as well as price increases on fuel, fertilizer, and other supplies from the various net zero initiatives that are either in place or expected to take effect.

    The report projects that the cost base of this farm will escalate from $192,000 to $257,000 as a result. As costs trickle down to consumers, the grocery bill for a family of four would increase from $8,320 to $9,650—a 15 percent increase.

    “It’s important for people to understand that when you’re raising costs to farmers, that is being passed on to consumers of food, and some types of food are going to be impacted more,” Mr. Hederman said. “So for example, beef is going to go up more than oranges because if you’re raising the cost of corn, that’s an input to beef, so beef suffers a double whammy.”

    The average price of ground beef increased from $3.97 per pound in January 2021 to $5.03 per pound in January 2024, according to Federal Reserve statistics.

    Cattle ranchers are struggling not only with higher feed and fuel costs but also drought in many parts of the United States, which has reduced herd size.

    According to EPA [url=https://www.ers.usda.gov/topics/natural-resources-environment/climate-change/#:~:text=U.S. agriculture emitted an estimated,carbon dioxide (EPA 2023).]estimates[/url], agriculture accounted for 10.6 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in 2021, with the bulk of those emissions coming from livestock and fertilizer.


    Beef a Luxury


    Climate activists often oppose animal farming for this reason, and within that category, beef is the number one target. Of all livestock, beef produces the most greenhouse gas emissions and accounts for about 60 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions from farming, studies suggest.


    Jais Valeur, CEO of Danish Crown, Europe’s top meat processor, told Denmark’s Berlingske newspaper in 2021 that beef will soon become a luxury because of the emissions from producing it.
    price - As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say Image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimg.theepochtimes.com%2Fassets%2Fuploads%2F2024%2F02%2F15%2Fid5588213-4
    “It will be a bit like champagne, namely a luxury product,” Mr. Valeur said. “The beef cattle will be a luxury product that we eat when we need to pamper ourselves.”


    Many farmers have argued that, while larger corporate farms may be able to weather the additional pricing pressure, net zero policies will be particularly harmful to smaller farms, which will concentrate food production among an ever smaller number of producers.

    Everybody needs food to survive, so farms can pass on a great deal of that cost,” Mr. Hederman said. “But our belief is that family farms, smaller farms, a lot of them will sell out or go out of business because they do not have as much access to capital.”


    Farming, with its use of heavy equipment for planting, harvesting, and transportation, is a capital intensive business. It also requires large amounts of working capital to finance the period between planting crops or raising animals, and when produce or livestock can be sold to market.


    This has raised concerns that because of the environmental, social, and governance movement (ESG), which has taken hold among many Wall Street financial institutions, banks will start to penalize farms that fail to comply with ESG criteria, including to reduce emissions.


    On Jan. 29, agriculture officials from 12 U.S. states sent letters to banks, including JPMorgan Chase, Citibank, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, urging them not to impose net zero criteria on farmers.


    The banks are all members of the U.N. Net Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA), which commits members to achieve U.N. net zero goals throughout their loan portfolios.
    While these commitments are confirmed on bank websites, a JPMorgan spokesperson told The Epoch Times that “JPMorgan Chase does not have an agriculture emissions intensity reduction target” and that “we make our own banking, lending, and underwriting decisions and don’t relinquish decision-making to third parties.”


    UN Paris Accords Set the Terms


    In 2016, the Obama administration signed the United States up to the United Nations Paris Climate Accords.
    The agreement commits America to cutting its greenhouse gas emissions by 50-52 percent by 2030 and to reach economy-wide net zero emissions by 2050.
    In 2017, President Donald Trump withdrew the United States from the agreement.
    (This article continues,,,,,,,,,)




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    price - As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say Empty Re: As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say

    Post by Rocky Fri 16 Feb 2024, 8:31 am

    Bama Diva, Thanks for posting these interesting articles wrote:Bama Diva
    As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say

    The net zero climate agenda is pushing regulations and costs onto farmers, which translate to costlier food items for Americans.


    February 15, 2024
    Updated:
    February 15, 2024

    As inflation remains stubbornly high, farmers throughout the Western world are warning that cost increases from the net zero movement will drive food prices still higher, while simultaneously putting many smaller farmers out of business.

    January inflation numbers showed that prices increased by 3.1 percent over what they were a year ago, indicating that the fight against inflation, while progressing, has not been won.
    Overall, prices have surged by nearly 18 percent since January 2021 when President Joe Biden took office.

    Americans are struggling in an economy in which, by official statistics, nearly one-fifth of the value of their dollars has evaporated in three years—though many will say the cost of food and other essentials has become more expensive than what the official numbers state.

    The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), which tracks food prices, offers an optimistic assessment of the coming year. After having gone up 9.9 percent in 2022, the USDA states, “[food] prices grew more slowly in 2023,” increasing by only 5.8 percent.

    “Food prices are expected to continue to decelerate in 2024,” the USDA projects.



    While some predict that the worst is behind us, analysts of the U.S. farming industry say there is another round of price inflation in the works, which will come from the Biden administration’s “whole of government” effort to reduce global temperatures.

    A recent report by the Buckeye Institute attempts to quantify the cost of Bidenomics to farmers.
    price - As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say Image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimg.theepochtimes.com%2Fassets%2Fuploads%2F2024%2F02%2F15%2Fid5588211-1
    The report, titled “Net-Zero Climate-Control Policies Will Fail the Farm,” projects that farmers will see costs rise by at least 34 percent, which will increase the household grocery bill for an American family of four by more than $1,300 per year.

    “Complying with net-zero emissions policies and corporate ESG reporting requirements will increase prices of farm inputs, the costs of which will ultimately be passed onto consumers at grocery stores and restaurants,” the report states.

    “This is where the left is going, trying to get to net zero,” Rea Hederman, executive director of the Buckeye Institute’s economic research center, told The Epoch Times. And the costs imposed on farmers are in addition to price hikes from inflation, weather, or other factors that typically impact food prices.

    “The fact that the federal government printed too much money, this is on top of that,” Mr. Hederman said, “and it’s a sustained increase, not a temporary fluctuation in food prices, because you’re building higher baseline operating costs that are going to be permanent for farmers going forward.”

    The report analyzed an average U.S. farm, which is about 700 acres in size, producing corn. It then summed the costs of complying with net zero mandates, as well as price increases on fuel, fertilizer, and other supplies from the various net zero initiatives that are either in place or expected to take effect.

    The report projects that the cost base of this farm will escalate from $192,000 to $257,000 as a result. As costs trickle down to consumers, the grocery bill for a family of four would increase from $8,320 to $9,650—a 15 percent increase.

    “It’s important for people to understand that when you’re raising costs to farmers, that is being passed on to consumers of food, and some types of food are going to be impacted more,” Mr. Hederman said. “So for example, beef is going to go up more than oranges because if you’re raising the cost of corn, that’s an input to beef, so beef suffers a double whammy.”

    The average price of ground beef increased from $3.97 per pound in January 2021 to $5.03 per pound in January 2024, according to Federal Reserve statistics.

    Cattle ranchers are struggling not only with higher feed and fuel costs but also drought in many parts of the United States, which has reduced herd size.

    According to EPA [url=https://www.ers.usda.gov/topics/natural-resources-environment/climate-change/#:~:text=U.S. agriculture emitted an estimated,carbon dioxide (EPA 2023).]estimates[/url], agriculture accounted for 10.6 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in 2021, with the bulk of those emissions coming from livestock and fertilizer.


    Beef a Luxury


    Climate activists often oppose animal farming for this reason, and within that category, beef is the number one target. Of all livestock, beef produces the most greenhouse gas emissions and accounts for about 60 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions from farming, studies suggest.


    Jais Valeur, CEO of Danish Crown, Europe’s top meat processor, told Denmark’s Berlingske newspaper in 2021 that beef will soon become a luxury because of the emissions from producing it.
    price - As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say Image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimg.theepochtimes.com%2Fassets%2Fuploads%2F2024%2F02%2F15%2Fid5588213-4
    “It will be a bit like champagne, namely a luxury product,” Mr. Valeur said. “The beef cattle will be a luxury product that we eat when we need to pamper ourselves.”


    Many farmers have argued that, while larger corporate farms may be able to weather the additional pricing pressure, net zero policies will be particularly harmful to smaller farms, which will concentrate food production among an ever smaller number of producers.

    Everybody needs food to survive, so farms can pass on a great deal of that cost,” Mr. Hederman said. “But our belief is that family farms, smaller farms, a lot of them will sell out or go out of business because they do not have as much access to capital.”


    Farming, with its use of heavy equipment for planting, harvesting, and transportation, is a capital intensive business. It also requires large amounts of working capital to finance the period between planting crops or raising animals, and when produce or livestock can be sold to market.


    This has raised concerns that because of the environmental, social, and governance movement (ESG), which has taken hold among many Wall Street financial institutions, banks will start to penalize farms that fail to comply with ESG criteria, including to reduce emissions.


    On Jan. 29, agriculture officials from 12 U.S. states sent letters to banks, including JPMorgan Chase, Citibank, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, urging them not to impose net zero criteria on farmers.


    The banks are all members of the U.N. Net Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA), which commits members to achieve U.N. net zero goals throughout their loan portfolios.
    While these commitments are confirmed on bank websites, a JPMorgan spokesperson told The Epoch Times that “JPMorgan Chase does not have an agriculture emissions intensity reduction target” and that “we make our own banking, lending, and underwriting decisions and don’t relinquish decision-making to third parties.”


    UN Paris Accords Set the Terms


    In 2016, the Obama administration signed the United States up to the United Nations Paris Climate Accords.
    The agreement commits America to cutting its greenhouse gas emissions by 50-52 percent by 2030 and to reach economy-wide net zero emissions by 2050.
    In 2017, President Donald Trump withdrew the United States from the agreement.
    (This article continues,,,,,,,,,)




    AD



    https://www.theepochtimes.com/article/in-depth-climate-agenda-will-spark-another-round-of-food-price-hikes-analysts-say-5587639?utm_source=Morningbrief&src_src=Morningbrief&utm_campaign=mb-2024-02-16&src_cmp=mb-2024-02-16&utm_medium=email&est=AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAbOw4JUtdn%2BHF7boC8GZWBhepVtnYAlFT6lVGJHoadVg%3D

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    price - As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say Empty Re: As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say

    Post by wciappetta Fri 16 Feb 2024, 2:43 pm

    It's idiotic, look at this report below. This is exactly what happens, the earth processes CO2. Plants grow faster, food stocks increase at a faster rate. This world is designed to accommodate the habitability of more population. Just like one tiny seed produces a bounty of fruits, from one person nations become. Balance and stability were designed into creation. Climate accords are nothing more than the consolidation of power to the few over the many. Wake up while you can. The report below proves the climate crew are lying to you. I've seen the laboratory proof of CO2's effect on plants, it's really quite amazing.
     
    New study finds that CO2 is increasing the rate by which the globe is greening, even under drought


    The study found that increased plant growth, called "greening," accelerated in 55.15% of the globe, while browning, which is where plants are decreasing in greening, occurred in only 7.28%.

    price - As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say 17054105644565a6800429abb

    A new study finds that human-caused carbon dioxide emissions are driving increased plant growth that’s greening the Earth, even in areas experiencing drought.
    The peer-reviewed study, which was published in the scientific journal Global Ecology and Conservation, finds that the phenomenon known as “global greening” is an indisputable fact. The rate of global greening has increased slightly, and drought has only slowed, but not stopped, the process.
    The study, which was done by Chinese and Australian researchers, attributes the greening to carbon dioxide fertilization as well as land management, such as irrigation. The opposite of greening is referred to as browning. The study found that greening acceleration occurred in 55.15% of the globe, while browning occurred in only 7.28%.
    “Combined with meteorological variables, we found that CO2 change dominated the LAI [greening] trend,” the authors wrote.
    The fact carbon dioxide emissions are stimulating plant growth is not a new finding. In 2016, a study in Nature Climate Change using NASA satellite data found that 25% to 50% of the Earth’s vegetated lands showed significant greening over the previous 35 years from when the study was done.
    Gregory Wrightstone, executive director of the CO2 Coalition, told Just The News that global greening is among benefits of global warming that are ignored and dismissed because it doesn’t fit a narrative that climate change is causing a crisis.
    “There’s a lot of people who make a lot of money on the backs of the false notion of a pending climate crisis,” Wrightstone said.
    The CO2 Coalition, whose membership includes scientists with a variety of academic backgrounds — including Dr. John Clauser who won the Nobel Prize in 2022 — argues that climate change is not a crisis and can produce net positive benefits.
    The group’s views of climate change have not been welcomed in mainstream circles. In March 2022, the group had purchased a booth at the National Science Teaching Association’s annual conference in Atlanta, Georgia. Though the booth had been approved, the group was ejected after attendees complained about their literature.
    In 2018, a New York Times article argued that global greening, in the long run, is “terrible.” The reporter interviewed scientists who said that plants that take in more carbon dioxide may also release more of the gas at night in a process known as respiration. Plants stimulated with carbon dioxide, which some growers deliberately pump into their greenhouses to increase plant growth, may also be less nutritious.
    The Times article speculates this could lead to widespread diseases from nutrient deficiencies. Since 1970, however, undernourishment in developing countries has steadily declined.
    Jeff Reynolds, senior investigative researcher with Restoration of America, recently published a two-part investigative report on the entire climate debate, He told Just The News that benefits of increased carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere and global warming are often denied.
    “I understand the benefit of carbon dioxide, because I took eighth grade science,” Reynolds said.
    Reynolds said that the benefits of anything can come with costs and tradeoffs, but on balance, greening of the Earth is a positive outcome of carbon dioxide emissions.

    New study finds that CO2 is increasing the rate by which the globe is greening, even under drought | Just The News


    _________________
    In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.... For from His fullness, we have all received and grace upon grace. For the Law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. No one has ever yet seen God. The only begotten God, the One being in the bosom of the Father, He has made Him known. - Berean Literal Bible

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    price - As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say Empty Re: As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say

    Post by Bama Diva Fri 16 Feb 2024, 3:45 pm

    There has been climate change since the beginning of time but many people have become quite rich from pushing the “fact” that the climate change is caused by man. The issue has become very political. 

    You may not be old enough but I recall when we were warned another ice age was coming, Then there was a huge ozone hole that was moving toward the US and we were going to burn up. Then the global warming, but eventually that was changed to climate change because definite worldwide warming could not be proved. 
    We all want clean air and clean water. I admit man has done some damage to many of our waterways and there were very needed changes made to change how factories polluted.

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    price - As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say Empty Re: As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say

    Post by wciappetta Fri 16 Feb 2024, 3:57 pm

    I might add the US met the climate agenda 2030 for pollution standards back in 2017 ... Without a treaty so it's not about the planet, its about global government.


    _________________
    In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.... For from His fullness, we have all received and grace upon grace. For the Law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. No one has ever yet seen God. The only begotten God, the One being in the bosom of the Father, He has made Him known. - Berean Literal Bible

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    price - As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say Empty Re: As Americans Struggle Financially, Climate Agenda Set to Spark New Food Price Hikes, Analysts Say

    Post by Bama Diva Fri 16 Feb 2024, 9:04 pm

    Absolutely correct!!

    Sponsored content


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