Virginia farmers face an innovation gap. For each dollar that Americans spend in the food system, farmers only receive nine hundred. It is not because they lack hard work or skills, but because they often do not have total control over the entries, the machines and even the data. Instead, this information is concentrated in separate companies and companies, which can use it to tighten farmers, reduce competition and make our food system less resilient.
As a founder of a Blockchain Technology Company based in Virginia, I saw first -hand how emerging tools can return this dynamic. Blockchain has the power to restore control to farmers by ensuring farmers and benefiting from the data generated by their land and equipment. However, to unlock this potential, we need clear and thoughtful rules of the legislators who provide certainty to innovators and to the protection of farmers.

Our work offers an overview of what is possible. My company has deployed weather stations on farms, which store their data on a secure blockchain network which allows producers to share critical environmental data directly. In practice, this means that farmers can use real -time confidence information to protect crops, negotiate better insurance conditions and defend a fairer share of profits. We have worked with vineyards in Virginia, Canadian producers and vineyards in Portugal, which unlock more negotiation and insight because their data is secure, transparent and owned by them.
This property is also important for consumers. Transparency in agriculture is not only a matter of economy but of health. We know that the levels of nutrients in products have decreased since the 1980s, and there are also risks of contamination by disease or chemicals. Imagine if each set of spinach or wheat wore a digital story that shows the soil in which it grew up, the weather conditions during the harvest and even the supply chain it has traveled. The blockchain makes this possible. With the right political framework, consumers could instantly access this data, strengthening confidence in the food system while rewarding farmers who invest in sustainable practices.
The challenge here is that innovation is changing faster than regulations. Entrepreneurs in Virginia and across the country develop tools that could revolutionize agriculture, but the lack of clear federal rules has created a “rhythm problem”. Farmers, companies and consumers all deserve certainty.
This is why legislation such as bipartite clarity. RAdopted by the American House of Representatives is so important. The bill provides a judicious framework to distinguish digital products and titles, ensuring that innovations based on blockchain have a clear legal path. The leaders on both sides of the aisle, including the own senator from Virginia, Mark Warner, rightly warned that if the American legislators do not shape these rules, other nations will do so.
By urging our federal representatives both in the Chamber and in the Senate to advance bills on market structure legislation like these, Virginia can be positioned to direct the foreground not only blockchain but also agriculture.
This is more than technology. It is the food security, the empowerment of farmers and national resilience. Farmers are the backbone of our economy and the guards of our land. With the right politicians, we can give them not only the tools to succeed, but also the freedom to have their future.
Alexander Mann is the founder of Vineyard Vantage, a system based on the blockchain built to empower precision agriculture in farms. It is based in Harrisonburg.


