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Task force releases new beef industry long range plan 

Long Range Plan Task Force 
Jul. 18, 2025 4 minutes read
Task force releases new beef industry long range plan 

Since genetic potential

Photo courtesy of Certified Angus Beef.

The Beef Industry Long Range Plan Task Force officially unveiled its new five-year plan for 2026-2030 at the Cattle Industry Summer Business Meeting in San Diego, CA. The mission of the Long Range Plan is to ensure the U.S. beef industry provides sustainable, high-quality beef that meets consumer demands worldwide. 

“Since late 2024, our task force has taken a hard look at what’s working in the beef industry and where we need to improve,” said Joe Lowe, Long Range Plan Task Force member and eighth-generation seedstock operator at Oak Hollow Angus in Smiths Grove, KY. “The result is a five-year plan that offers flexibility and local adaptation while keeping us all moving toward shared goals. By focusing on results and smart investments, we can keep the U.S. beef industry strong and competitive.” 

Long range plan  

The Beef Industry Long Range Plan is a tool designed to help the beef industry establish a common set of objectives and priorities. It communicates the industry’s strategic direction and provides insight on how the industry can serve its stakeholders by growing beef demand.  

Since 1995, industry leaders representing key beef industry segments—cow-calf, seedstock, dairy, feeder, animal health, livestock auctions and more—have gathered to develop an aligned, comprehensive plan with the goal of increasing consumer demand for beef. These leaders are brought together to study and compile major areas of opportunity facing beef over the next five years.  

The 2026-2030 Long Range Plan identifies six interconnected goals that represent what the industry wants to achieve: 

1. Policy and supply chain viability. The U.S. beef industry has a viable supply chain with the freedom to operate. 

2. Sustainable industry outcomes. The U.S. beef industry produces environmentally sound, economically viable and socially acceptable products.  

3. Public engagement and building confidence. The public trusts and demands high-quality, safe and nutrient-dense U.S. beef. 

4. Innovation, science, research and continuous improvement. The U.S. beef industry continues to innovate and improve, making the industry resilient, credible and successful in the long term.  

5. Stakeholder engagement. U.S. beef industry stakeholders align on production systems across segments to meet common consumer demands. 

6. Animal health and food safety. U.S. cattle and the beef supply are healthy and safe.  

Each goal is paired with a strategic initiative—a broad approach to achieving it—and a success definition. The goals are supported by actionable initiatives, organized to drive alignment and accountability across all segments of the beef supply chain.  

“All six goals work together, so progress toward one goal helps move others forward,” said Lowe. “For example, strong advocacy can lead to more research and innovation, which supports sustainability and builds trust. And by working together on animal health and other issues, we’re better prepared for challenges like disease outbreaks or changing consumer demands.” 

The Long Range Plan Task Force encourages other beef industry businesses and organizations to utilize the plan as input for their own strategic decision-making processes.   

For example, the Beef Checkoff, its committees, and contracting organizations, use pieces of the Long Range Plan as their guidebook. All funding decisions and focus areas of Checkoff projects and programs, by design, must follow the key areas outlined in the plan. Checkoff contractors take this direction and develop Checkoff-funded programs that fall within the scope of the Beef Promotion and Research Act and Order and support the plan’s priorities. 

“This Long Range Plan reflects the best of what our industry can do when we come together with a shared purpose,” said Lowe. “It’s built to be flexible, rooted in common-sense priorities and designed to help the industry stay strong no matter what challenges come our way. I’m proud of what we put together, and I’m looking forward to seeing how it can continue moving the beef industry forward in the years ahead.” 

To view the complete Beef Industry Long Range Plan, a plan summary or get more information, visit BeefLongRangePlan.com. — Long Range Plan Task Force 

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