HomePublicationsCrops & SoilsIssuesCrops & Soils: Volume 58, Issue 9Societies support PFAS recommendations September 19, 2025 Photo courtesy of Adobe Stock/jonbilous. Representing the research perspective, the American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America have joined 16 other agricultural organizations in a PFAS and Agriculture Working Group to develop the nation’s first comprehensive set of federal recommendations to address PFAS contamination of agricultural land. The recommendations call upon Congress and the executive branch to take pragmatic steps to address PFAS in order to protect farmers and their families, keep farms and ranches in business, maintain a safe national food supply, and safeguard our nation’s farmland for future generations. Representing the research perspective, the American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America have joined 16 other agricultural organizations in a PFAS and Agriculture Working Group to develop the nation’s first comprehensive set of federal recommendations to address PFAS contamination of agricultural land. The recommendations call upon Congress and the executive branch to take pragmatic steps to address PFAS in order to protect farmers and their families, keep farms and ranches in business, maintain a safe national food supply, and safeguard our nation’s farmland for future generations. Recommendations include:Congress, USDA, and the Department of Defense should provide health, financial, and technical support to PFAS-impacted farmers and ranchers.USEPA should protect farmers from unreasonable liability and third-party lawsuits under CERCLA (commonly known as “Superfund”).USEPA and USDA should reduce additional PFAS contamination of agricultural land.Congress, USDA, and other federal agencies should coordinate and invest in PFAS research.USDA and other federal agencies should implement a coordinated education and risk communications strategy.Read the full report here. More science policy Back to current issue Back to home Text © . The authors. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. Except where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.Share this: Related articles A smartphone can count your citrus crop June 12, 2026 Mandadi named director of Texas A&M AgriLife center at Weslaco June 11, 2026 Improving hemp yield and fiber quality through regenerative organic systems June 10, 2026 Recent articles Improving hemp yield and fiber quality through regenerative organic systems June 10, 2026 Optimizing cotton stand establishment June 4, 2026 Irrigation salts: friend or foe? June 3, 2026