Primghar, Iowa — An O’Brien County farmer is speaking out in favor of carbon pipelines. Kelly Nieuwenhuis, who farms near Primghar, is calling on what he says is the silent majority to join him in speaking out for carbon capture utilization and storage, or CCUS.
Nieuwenhuis calls opponents of such projects, like the Sierra Club, extremist environmental groups.
Nieuwenhuis says the Sierra Club has three reasons for fighting against carbon capture and the pipelines. The first he names is they don’t like the livestock and the cattle production industry. Second, he says they don’t like production agriculture and they’re anti-GMO.
Carbon Intensity, or CI, is a way to measure how well a company manages its carbon output. The lower the score, the more carbon-sensitive markets are willing to do business with you. Nieuwenhuis says an ethanol plant’s base CI score is around 70, and a carbon pipeline lowers that score around 30 points. He questions why the Sierra Club is opposing things that will help meet their own goal.
Niewuenhuis says he’s negotiated with the pipelines and received everything he asked for regarding his land and how they’ll use it. He says the argument pipelines will ruin farmland is false.
Nieuwenhuis serves on the board of directors for Siouxland Energy, an ethanol production plant in Sioux Center, and he’s also the chair of the National Corn Ethanol Committee.
Ethanol Plant Photo – KIWA Stock Photo