Expiring CRP acreage varied with its conservation practice | Western Livestock Journal
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Expiring CRP acreage varied with its conservation practice

USDA Economic Research Service
Jan. 15, 2020 1 minute read
Expiring CRP acreage varied with its conservation practice

Expiring CRP acreage varied with its conservation practice

Economic Research Service (ERS) researchers tracked the fate of 7.6 million acres of Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) land in contracts that expired between 2013 and 2016.

About 36 percent of expiring land (2.76 million acres) reenrolled into the CRP. Of the about 4.89 million acres that exited the program (i.e., were not reenrolled), nearly 80 percent of the land was put into some type of crop production—with the remainder going into grass, tree, and other non-agricultural covers.

CRP land associated with tree practices was the most likely to be reenrolled in the program, at a rate of 47 percent, compared with 35 percent of land in grass practices and 29 percent of land in wildlife practices.

Of land that did not reenroll, 77 percent of land in a tree practice retained a tree cover, and only 13 percent went to annual crop production. In contrast, 65 percent of land in a wetland practice and 59 percent of land in a grass practice went to annual crop production. — USDA ERS

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