Food shortages could be coming soon unless the U.S. government intervenes to bring down the cost of fuel and fertilizer, warns the National Black Farmers Association.
By Selena Fragassi
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President John W. Boyd, Jr., a fourth-generation farmer who founded the nonprofit in 1995 (now representing tens of thousands of African-American food producers and their families), recently told Fox News, that if action isn’t taken, “we’re going to see empty food shelves in the coming months.”
“The administration isn’t talking enough about the plight of what’s going on with Americans,” said Boyd. “We’re losing farmers every year that we don’t take action, and that’s going to help, but it’s going to hurt us here at home.
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His warning comes at a time when food prices have skyrocketed amid inflation, and more farmers are forced to abandon crops as the cost of goods to produce food has surged. As the World Bank Group noted in May, the cost of fertilizer, in particular, has increased by 30% in 2022, coming off an already steep 80% increase in 2021, and it’s expected to keep climbing amid restrictions with international sanctions and exports.
In his own case, Boyd cited paying $1,100 per ton of fertilizer in 2022, a jump from $400 a ton in 2021, and fuel costs are adding to the dilemma.
“You have the high cost of fuel, the high cost of fertilizer and lime and all of these upfront costs for America’s farmers, and we haven’t done anything in place to fix that,” Boyd shared, adding that the end result could be ghost shelves at grocery stores like Americans witnessed at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
“We’re heading for a food shortage in this country where you have different regions of the world, such as Ukraine, that won’t be producing enough commodities such as corn, wheat and soybeans. All of these things are going to affect us here at home,” Boyd added.
He’s putting pressure on the Biden Administration to “put American farmers first,” criticizing the federal aid given to help the crisis in Ukraine as well as to fight a food famine in Northern Africa and not allocating the same funding to this serious homegrown issue.
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“I’m sure those African countries definitely need the support, but we also have to take care of those that are at home, and the Biden administration isn’t moving and acting swiftly enough to address the farm crisis,” Boyd told Fox News, also claiming that he was set to have a meeting with the administration at the White House, but it’s yet to be scheduled.
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