The claim: A federal infrastructure bill includes an โ€˜animal agriculture taxโ€™ of $2,600 per head of cattle

As Congress deliberates trillions of dollars worth of spending on infrastructure and social welfare programs before a looming government shutdown, some online claim the legislation includes a new tax on farmers.

A Sept. 27 Facebook post says the โ€œ$3.5 Trillion Infrastructure package includes an animal agriculture tax on dairy cows in the amount of $6,500.00 and $2,600.00 per head of other cattle.โ€

โ€œIt also includes an agriculture tax in the amount of $500.00 on swine (pigs- hogs) raised in the United States,โ€ the post says. โ€œAND that would be for each and every year.โ€

The post accumulated more than 1,000 shares in a day. Similar claims have racked up thousands of interactions on Facebook and Instagram, according to CrowdTangle, a social media insights tool.

Many of the posts cite a Sept. 22 column from Rep. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., titled โ€œBlank Check for Socialism.โ€ In it, Mullin says the $3.5 trillion Build Back Better Act โ€“ which is separate from the $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure bill โ€“ would โ€œimpose a โ€˜feeโ€™ on all methane emissions, including in our agriculture industry.โ€

โ€œThe tax is estimated to cost $6,500 per dairy cow, $2,600 per head of cattle, and $500 per swine each year,โ€ the column reads. โ€œThat is more than what the animals are worth, itโ€™ll run ranchers out of business.โ€

The Build Back Better Act, a budget reconciliation bill, does include a proposed methane fee. But itโ€™s aimed at cutting greenhouse gas emissions from oil and natural gas producers, not farmers. Federal tax and farm law experts, as well as lobbying groups, say the provision is not a tax on cattle.

โ€œNo, the Build Back Better Act doesnโ€™t include an โ€˜animal agriculture taxโ€™ of any amount, let alone $2,600 per head of cattle,โ€ Joshua Sewell, a senior policy analyst at Taxpayers for Common Sense, a federal budget watchdog organization, said in an email.

USA TODAY reached out to the Facebook user who shared the claim for comment.

Proposed methane fee focuses on oil, natural gas industries

If passed, the Build Back Better Act would impose a fee on methane emissions from oil and natural gas producers. Cattle farmers would not have to pay.

โ€œUltimately, the rumors relative to a potential cow tax are just that โ€“ rumors,โ€ said Danielle Beck, senior executive director of government affairs at the National Cattlemenโ€™s Beef Association, a trade and lobbying group for beef producers. โ€œAnd we view it as an unhelpful distraction from the issues at hand.โ€

The House Energy and Commerce Committee approved the methane fee provision of the Build Back Better Act in mid-September. If Congress passes the reconciliation package, oil and natural gas producers would have to pay $1,500 for each metric ton of methane they emit above specific intensity thresholds.

Republican detractors said the fee would raise costs associated with heating homes and other activities, while Democrats argued it would reduce greenhouse gas emissions contributing to global warming. Rep. Kathy Castor, D-Fla., said the provision would โ€œincentivize companies to find and fix leaks and stop intentional emissions like venting and flaring.โ€

The agriculture industry is the largest source of methane emissions in the U.S., according to the Environmental Protection Agency. But Mary Werden, communications director for Rep. Frank Pallone, the Democratic chair of the Energy and Commerce Committee, told USA TODAY in an email the claim in the Facebook post is โ€œpatently false.โ€

โ€œThere is absolutely no provision in the Build Back Better Act that would do what you described,โ€ she said. โ€œThis myth appears to stem from Republican opposition to the methane fee, but โ€“ by their own admission โ€“ the methane fee only applies to certain oil and gas facilities.โ€

Republicans on the committee tried to amend the proposal to specifically exempt cattle operations. But Democrats defeated the amendment, saying the proposal didnโ€™t apply to agriculture to begin with.

Claim stems from hypothetical calculation

The source of the claim in the Facebook post is a statement from an insurance company and lobbying group that represents the agriculture industry.

Meredith Blanford, Mullinโ€™s communications director, said in an email the claim in the congressmanโ€™s column was based on an analysis conducted by the American Farm Bureau Federation. She cited a statement from the group that calculated the rough $2,600 and $6,500 figures based on the fee proposed in the reconciliation bill, as well as the amount of methane produced by the livestock sector.

โ€œThis is what could happen if the methane fee were applied to agriculture,โ€ Blanford said. โ€œRight now the text of the bill only specifies the oil and gas industry, but it also references EPAโ€™s (greenhouse gas) inventory and leaves too much room for the EPA to expand its regulatory reach.โ€

In other words, Blanford acknowledged the calculation is theoretical โ€“ a critical nuance left out of Mullinโ€™s column.

Mullin wrongly said the legislation would impose a fee that included the agriculture industry and โ€œis estimated to cost $6,500 per dairy cow, $2,600 per head of cattle, and $500 per swine each year.โ€

Mike Tomko, director of communications at the Farm Bureau, told USA TODAY in an email the reconciliation bill โ€œdoes not impose a methane tax on agriculture.โ€

Beck said the caveat in the Farm Bureauโ€™s analysis โ€œhas been ignored, and several individuals have taken this theoretical analysis and run with it.โ€

She said some proposed changes to the tax code in the Build Back Better Act could adversely affect farmers, but those arenโ€™t fee structures.

And other parts of the reconciliation package are โ€œon track to shovel cash to the agriculture sector,โ€ according to Sewell.

โ€œThe reconciliation portion from the Agriculture Committee โ€ฆ spends more than $90 billion on agriculture and forestry,โ€ he said. โ€œThe Build Back Better agenda isnโ€™t picking the pockets of farmers, itโ€™s opening up the federal Treasury wallet to them.โ€

Our rating: False

Based on our research, we rate FALSE the claim that a federal infrastructure bill includes an โ€œanimal agriculture taxโ€ of $2,600 per head of cattle. If passed, the Build Back Better Act would charge oil and natural gas producers a $1,500 fee for each metric ton of methane they emit above specific intensity thresholds. Cattle farmers are not included in the provision. The claim is based on a theoretical calculation from the Farm Bureau if the methane fee were applied to livestock, but no one is proposing to do that.

Our fact-check sources:

Thank you for supporting our journalism. You can subscribe to our print edition, ad-free app or electronic newspaper replica here.

Our fact-check work is supported in part by a grant from Facebook.

Share This Story!

Related Posts