How the Electric Car Killed the Corn Industry

If we all switch to driving electric vehicles, the market could drown in excess corn. Tobacco farmers offer solutions.

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by AdobeStock/Cristi

I am a farmer with a black-and-blue thumb and a science writer who’s terrible at math. I embrace a science-based understanding of climate, but sometimes I still pray for rain. And over the coming months, I’ll share in this new column some of the most pressing challenges facing how we feed ourselves and our communities,  along with the most promising solutions I’ve come across for ensuring a food-secure future.

Scientists have sounded the alarm about serious problems impacting agriculture, including more frequent and severe floods and droughts, rising input costs, and dwindling water resources. Through conversations with a few of these scientists, along with executives and investors in the AgTech and sustainable-food sectors, I’ll aim to illuminate innovation happening across the food-supply chain.

North Carolina’s “Burley Belt” tobacco acreage declined by 95% in 15 years.

An old tobacco farm in North Carolina.

If you find yourself suspicious that technological solutions are the answer, know that I hear you. The organic agriculture movement of the 1960s was, in part, a reaction to the industrialized model for farming that was beginning to take over at the time and the chemical hazards it brought with it. Those early pioneers continue to point me toward a better path  — one without fossil-fuel-derived fertilizers (which have risen in cost 200% since 2020), without pesticides harmful to bees and soil health, and without rampant food waste.

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