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  <title>Voices of Florida Farmers: Building a Circular Bioeconomy</title>
  <description>  Florida agriculture quietly underpins everyday life in the Sunshine State, shaping everything from grocery prices and water quality to how communities bounce back after a hurricane. In this episode of the Climate Correction Podcast, host Shannon&amp;amp;nbsp;Maganiezin&amp;amp;nbsp;sits down with the team behind the newly released&amp;amp;nbsp;report,&amp;amp;nbsp;Voices&amp;amp;nbsp;of Florida Farmers: Building a Circular&amp;amp;nbsp;Bioeconomy,&amp;amp;nbsp;to&amp;amp;nbsp;explore how the state's farmers, ranchers, foresters, and&amp;amp;nbsp;aquaculturists&amp;amp;nbsp;are&amp;amp;nbsp;producing more with less land, water, and resources,&amp;amp;nbsp;while&amp;amp;nbsp;keeping food affordable and local economies strong.&amp;amp;nbsp;   Leading the conversation is Courtney Girgis, the report's lead author, who grew up on a beef cattle, corn, and&amp;amp;nbsp;soybean&amp;amp;nbsp;farm in northern Missouri and now writes about agriculture from her family's&amp;amp;nbsp;small-acreage&amp;amp;nbsp;farm&amp;amp;nbsp;in Oklahoma. Courtney unpacks what a &amp;quot;circular bioeconomy&amp;quot; means in practice: an approach to agriculture that moves away from the linear &amp;quot;make, use, waste&amp;quot; model and instead keeps nutrients, water, and materials cycling, starting with healthy&amp;amp;nbsp;soil&amp;amp;nbsp;and extending outward into partnerships across the food system.&amp;amp;nbsp;   Joining her are three of the Florida producers featured in the report. Beaver Yoder, a Florida Panhandle cattle rancher, partners with neighboring crop farmers to graze his herd on cover crops between cash crop seasons, a practice that builds soil health, fertilizes fields, and creates a new revenue stream for everyone involved. Lanette Sobel, founder of Fertile Earth Worm Farm (now the largest commercial composting operation in South Florida), works across a wide network of distributors, food pantries, and farms to make sure food scraps go to their &amp;quot;highest&amp;amp;nbsp;and&amp;amp;nbsp;best use,&amp;quot; feeding people first, then animals, then soil. Timothy Solano, a second-generation clam farmer and operations manager at&amp;amp;nbsp;Cedar Key Aquaculture&amp;amp;nbsp;Farms, raises clams that filter pollutants like nitrogen and carbon from Florida's coastal waters&amp;amp;nbsp;before being harvested for sale&amp;amp;nbsp;at Costco and Whole Foods.&amp;amp;nbsp;The&amp;amp;nbsp;clams' crushed shells go on to repair roads and surface local school parking lots.&amp;amp;nbsp;   Together, the conversation moves from real-world examples of circularity on the farm and on the water, to the regulatory and economic obstacles that keep these practices from being more&amp;amp;nbsp;widespread, and&amp;amp;nbsp;to what listeners can do to support a more circular Florida. Along the way, the guests speak candidly about the realities of thin margins, volatile markets, red tide, local ordinances, and the long arc of&amp;amp;nbsp;agriculture's&amp;amp;nbsp;shift from generalist to specialist, and back again.&amp;amp;nbsp;   Voices of Florida Farmers: Building a Circular Bioeconomy was made possible&amp;amp;nbsp;through&amp;amp;nbsp;a grant from&amp;amp;nbsp;VoLo&amp;amp;nbsp;Foundation. The full report is a substantive look at the 44,400 farms and ranches that make up Florida agriculture, the pressures they face from rapid development and a changing climate, and the policy, research, and market support&amp;amp;nbsp;that would allow them to go further&amp;amp;nbsp;in cycling nutrients, rebuilding soil, sequestering carbon, and strengthening local economies. The link is in the show notes. Florida agriculture deserves your attention, and this report is&amp;amp;nbsp;a great place&amp;amp;nbsp;to start.&amp;amp;nbsp;   Links:   Read the Report:&amp;amp;nbsp;bit.ly/Florida-Voices-Circular-Bioeconomy&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;   Florida Smart Agriculture’s work: &amp;amp;nbsp;www.solutionsfromtheland.org/flcsa&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;amp;nbsp;     Connect with Beaver Yoder: https://www.thisfarmcares.org/steveyoder  Connect with Lanette Sobel: https://fertileearth.net/  Connect with Timothy Solano: https://www.instagram.com/clamcaptain/  Learn more about &amp;quot;Fresh from Florida&amp;quot;: https://followfreshfromflorida.com/ &amp;amp;nbsp; &amp;amp;nbsp;    &amp;amp;nbsp;  </description>
  <author_name>Climate Correction™ Podcast</author_name>
  <author_url>https://volofoundation.org/climate-correction-podcast/</author_url>
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