Farms.com Home   Ag Industry News

USDA secures 2.2m acres for conservation efforts

Aug 20, 2024
By Farms.com

Conservation reserve program approaches capacity

 

The U.S. Department of Agriculture's latest efforts in land conservation have successfully secured more than 2.2 million acres through the 2024 Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) offers. This initiative, spearheaded by the USDA’s Farm Service Agency, reflects a near-maximum enrollment, with the program cap set at 27 million acres.

Zach Ducheneaux, FSA Administrator, highlighted the significance of this milestone. “Reaching near the acreage cap of our Conservation Reserve Programs underscores the dedication to ecological preservation and climate resilience among our agricultural community,” he remarked.

Key contributors to this year’s CRP include the Grassland program, which saw nearly 1.44 million acres accepted. The program prioritizes the conservation of working grasslands, which are crucial for maintaining biodiversity and enhancing soil carbon storage, even under continued agricultural use.

In addition to Grassland CRP, the General and Continuous segments also recorded significant enrollments, reinforcing the CRP’s role in fostering land cover restoration to improve water quality and support diverse wildlife populations.

Producers interested in furthering conservation efforts can still participate through the Continuous CRP, which accepts enrollments on an ongoing basis, ensuring that conservation efforts are both sustained and adaptable to emerging environmental needs.


Trending Video

Spring Planting Prep Just Got Serious… We NEED This!

Video: Spring Planting Prep Just Got Serious… We NEED This!

Getting closer to planting season means one thing… it’s time to get EVERYTHING ready.

Today didn’t go exactly as planned—we thought we’d be hauling potatoes again, but instead we spent the day digging equipment out of the cellar, hooking up the grain drill, and getting tractors ready to roll. With wheat planting just around the corner, every piece of equipment matters.

Of course, it wouldn’t be a normal day without a few problems… dead batteries, hydraulic issues, and a truck tire that absolutely refused to cooperate. We tried everything—jump packs, bead bazooka, ratchet straps… and eventually had to bring out the “big guns” just to get things moving again.

But that’s farm life—adapt, fix, and keep moving forward.

We’re getting close to go-time. Wheat seed is coming soon, and planting season is right around the corner