CRP incentivizes higher quality cover practices using EBI | Western Livestock Journal
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CRP incentivizes higher quality cover practices using EBI

USDA Economic Research Service
Mar. 04, 2022 1 minute read
CRP incentivizes higher quality cover practices using EBI

The Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) allows landowners and producers to enroll eligible, environmentally sensitive agricultural land in return for payments determined through long-term contracts. Most land in the program has come in through the general sign-up, a competitive offer process administered by USDA’s Farm Service Agency (FSA). Every offer in each general sign-up is scored using the Environmental Benefits Index (EBI).

“The single most important producer decision involves determining which cover practice to apply to the acres offered,” FSA says in its EBI fact sheet, which provides guidance to potential program participants.

“Planting or establishing the highest scoring cover mixture is the best way to improve the chances of offer acceptance.”

In a recent report, the Economic Research Service (ERS) analyzed the EBI points for the 11 most common practices selected in the general sign-up. Cover practices that are considered higher quality, such as pollinator habitat or those using hardwood trees, earn more EBI points.

Some cover practices score additional points if the land being offered for the CRP falls within a wildlife priority zone (WPZ). For practices outside of WPZs, the EBI points awarded ranged from 13 to 100. Within WPZs, the EBI points ranged higher, from 13 to 130. — USDA ERS

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