ARTICLE SUMMARY: Learn how carbon farming helps the profitability of individual operations and the broader community.
Carbon farming opens up new revenue streams for farmers and helps operations become more profitable, all while building soil health.
But the economic benefits don’t stop at individual operations, they trickle into the communities where those carbon farmers live. While agriculture has long been an economic driver in rural communities, as new revenue streams like carbon farming become more popular, the local economies with carbon farmers are set to reap big benefits.
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Across the country, agriculture is a major economic driver. According to the USDA, agriculture, food, and related industries contributed more than $1 trillion to the US GDP in 2019, accounting for a 5.2% share. It also accounted for 19.7 million full and part-time jobs in 2020, which is 10.3% of total US employment. 2.6 million of those jobs are direct on-farm jobs, which account for 1.4% of US employment.
Ag also majorly supports rural communities across the country via job opportunities and local spending. When agriculture brings more money to rural areas, those communities prosper. Carbon programs are poised to be a big part of that, helping growers become more profitable and, in turn, have more spending power that supports their community.
Carbon programs introduce a new revenue stream into a farmer’s operation. At scale, these programs can further support local economies not just by bringing money in through carbon payments and new activities like selling cover crops and custom applying cover crops, but also by encouraging growers to decrease their inputs. That equation equals higher profitability. But not all carbon programs will equally affect economies. For growers and community programs looking into what carbon programs will best support their success, look to the market-leading Carbon by Indigo program.
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“I think as the price of carbon continues to go up, which seems to be the trend, it's not an insignificant portion of the revenue per acre on the operation. It's in line with our vision of what we want to see happen here at the farm, and how we want to work on the land,” says Drucker.
Additionally, beyond carbon credit generation, Carbon by Indigo incorporates soil health considerations into the program’s qualifying carbon practices. By building more productive soils, growers are setting their operation—and their communities—up for generational success and creating income streams that everyone can count on.
For Rodney Rulon, a corn and soybean grower in central Indiana, soil health was a strong consideration when enrolling in Carbon by Indigo, “The first [carbon] payment is really just what I hope will be the beginning of an income stream that we're going to be able to utilize and put back into conservation and soil improvement for us.”
When considering carbon programs, consider their impact on not only your operation, but also your local community — from soil health to carbon credit income, the Carbon by Indigo program offers the profitability and soil health support necessary for sustained growth for individual farms and local ecosystems and economies.