WASHINGTON, Oct. 8, 2014 – The Environmental Defense Fund is launching a new, collaborative initiative to eliminate fertilizer pollution as a major environmental concern in the U.S. EDF says it’s hoping to persuade farmers and businesses throughout the supply chain to transform the way corn and other fertilizer-dependent grain crops are grown and sourced.

EDF says its Sustainable Sourcing Initiative is already gaining traction with key players throughout the supply chain, including Walmart, the nation’s largest grocer, and several of the company’s suppliers, including General Mills, Smithfield and The Coca-Cola Company.

“If we’re going to meet food demands for a growing population, we’ve got to decouple production from pollution as soon as possible,” EDF Vice President David Festa said in a news release. “The most promising way to accomplish this essential task is by collaborating with decision makers at every point in the U.S. grain supply chain – from retailers and food companies to agribusiness and farmers.”

Inefficient use of fertilizer is one of the biggest threats to a stable climate and clean water, EDF noted. Nitrogen not soaked up by crops emits a heat-trapping gas 300 times more powerful than carbon dioxide. Phosphorus and nitrogen run-off from fertilizer causes toxic algal blooms that contaminate drinking water supplies and create dead zones. An algal bloom in Lake Erie threatened drinking water supplies for hundreds of thousands of people in the Toledo, Ohio, area in August.

Grains, especially corn, are the most fertilizer-intensive of all U.S. crops, using nearly 100 million tons a year.

“Our long-term goal is to make the entire U.S. grain supply sustainable – good for farmers, good for the climate and good for our waterways,” said Suzy Friedman, director of EDF’s Sustainable Sourcing Initiative. “To do that, we need to engage the private sector. We need to generate demand for sustainable grains and build up the supply,” said Jenny Ahlen, EDF supply chain manager. “It will make our food system more resilient.”

Already on board is Walmart, which last year asked many of its top suppliers to submit fertilizer optimization plan. It’s part of Walmart’s commitment to reduce 20 million metric tons of greenhouse gases (GHG) from its supply chain by 2015, a commitment that EDF it helped the company to develop. Walmart analyzed its greenhouse gas footprint and found that for half of its top 100 products, fertilizer use was the biggest GHG hotspot.

EDF is also working with several Walmart suppliers – including General Mills, Smithfield and The Coca-Cola Company (in partnership with World Wildlife Fund) -- to develop and implement fertilizer efficiency programs. So far, 15 companies representing 30 percent of food and beverage sales in North America have developed plans to source more sustainable grains to meet Walmart’s demand, EDF said.

The groups said it is also collaborating with Iowa-based United Suppliers on a fertilizer efficiency program to meet the supply chain demand. United Suppliers is a member-owned wholesaler that provides agricultural products and services to about 700 grower cooperatives and retailers covering 45 million acres of farmland in the United States. The company has committed to optimizing fertilizer use on 10 million acres, which would reduce greenhouse gas emissions by nearly 5 million metric tons and contribute to cleaner water.

“We believe we’ve got to be on the forefront of this sustainability issue and keep crop nutrients in the fields where they’re applied,’’ said United Suppliers Vice President Matt Carstens said in the EDF release. “With EDF’s help, we’ve put together a program that can help growers sort through practices that improve fertilizer efficiency so they can meet food companies’ new standards.”

EDF said it is also working with farmer networks that have helped to reduce fertilizer loss by an average of 25 percent on half a million acres while maintaining or increasing crop yields.

The near-term goal of the EDF initiative is to maximize fertilizer efficiency on half of U.S. corn crops by 2020 (approximately 45 million acres), which would cut 25 million metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions and improve water quality.

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