Regenerative Agriculture Takes Time — Recycling Grain Bags Offers Farmers a Practical Path to Sustainability

Some sustainability shifts are not particularly challenging and can be implemented with resources already available to farmers and ranchers on their operations.

NASHVILLE, TENN. (RFD-TV)Regenerative agriculture is a popular way to boost yields while reducing inputs and costs, but the research can be complex and time-consuming. Dr. Erin Silva, a specialist in organic and sustainable cropping systems, explained to AgInfo.net why it has become so challenging.

“It is very difficult to be able to capture the impacts of these practices, often because they are so biologically based across a wide range of ecosystems and environments,” Silva said. “A lot of what we see with the impacts of these practices is impacts on soil biology and the broader ecosystem. So, trying to capture the results of those changes in practice over multiple soil environments and how that impacts soil biology, it can be incredibly complex.”

Regenerative practices have become a big part of American farming, especially with cover crops. The latest Census of Agriculture (2022) shows that around 18 million acres of U.S. cropland switched to cover crops in recent years. That accounts for just under five percent of all American farmland.

However, some sustainability shifts are not particularly challenging and can be implemented with resources already available to farmers and ranchers on their operations.

Grain bags are getting a second life across farm country. Arkansas-based Delta Plastics is traveling the Midwest, picking them up for a new use. Delta Plastics Irrigation Specialist Chris DeClerk explains the process:

“It’s a good product for us to take in and to make other products from,” DeClerk said. “All we ask from the end user—it could be a farmer, it could be a co-op, it could be a waste disposal company that is looking to keep these grain bags out of the landfill—is that you just have the weight, you roll it up tight, you’re ready for a truck that we’re going to send, which is a 53-foot dry van trailer, and you need to have a bobcat. You need to have a ramp ready to go. That driver will pull up in a dry location—he or she more than likely won’t even get out of the truck—but you be ready to have the equipment necessary to load him up, and in a couple of hours we can be gone.”

Once recycled, the company turns the grain bags into other products, such as trash bags and resins. The best part, DeClerk said, is that the process of taking them off producers’ hands is free.

Related Stories
CoBank’s 2026 Year Ahead Report cites global grain oversupply, easing inflation, rate cuts, and major data center growth that could reshape rural America.
Plan for sharp, short-term volatility after unexpected outages; permanent closures rarely trigger major price spread disruptions.
Ethanol output softened, but underlying supply-and-demand trends indicate stable longer-term use despite short-term volatility in blending and exports.
Strong Farm Credit finances help cushion producers, but prolonged low crop margins could strain renewals in 2026.
USDA data confirms that U.S. agriculture remains overwhelmingly family-run despite structural shifts in scale and production, according to a new analystis by Farm Flavor.
The specific provision in the CO₂ storage law allowed the North Dakota Industrial Commission (NDIC) to authorize carbon storage projects to proceed even if they lacked unanimous consent from all affected landowners.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

University of Nebraska–Lincoln ag educator Matt Kreifels discusses his recent FFA Alumni award and the future of ag education.
Mexico plans to release 202,000 acre-feet of water into the Rio Grande, offering temporary relief to South Texas farmers as Congress advances the PERMIT Act.
Analysts say that while low-income households are facing financial pressures, other middle- and higher-income consumers are helping fill the gap for retail beef demand.
Despite China’s sharp drop in grain purchases this year, new USDA export data this week shows that even some buying activity from the trade giant still moves the markets.
Tim and Sharyn Abbott of the Music City Celebration Sale recap the weekend’s premier auction, which drew top dairy breeders and buyers to Nashville again this year from across North America.
The bill to once again allow schools to offer whole milk and 2% milk will now go to President Trump for approval.
Agriculture Shows
Hosted by Scott “The Cow Guy” Shellady and RFD News Markets Specialist Tony St. James, Commodity Talk delivers expert insight into the day’s ag commodity markets just before the CME opens. Only on RFD-TV and Rural Radio SiriusXM Channel 147.
A look at the news, weather and commodities headlines that drove agriculture markets in the past week.
Everything profits from prairie. Soil, air, water — and all kinds of life! Learn how you can improve your land with prairie restoration, cover crops and prairie strips, while growing your bottom line.
Special 3-part series tells the story of the Claas family’s legacy, which changed agriculture forever.