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Premium member Presentation Transcript Making Policy to Achieve Sustainable Agriculture: Making Policy to Achieve Sustainable Agriculture American Farmland Trust Ann Sorensen AAAS: Feb. 18, 2007Making Policy to Achieve Sustainable Agriculture: Making Policy to Achieve Sustainable Agriculture Environmental Sustainability: Overview: How sustainable are we? Options: Regulate (compliance; new regulations) Increase Incentives (conservation programs) Create a paradigm shift (ecosystem services)American Farmland Trust: American Farmland Trust Founded in 1980 to save farm and ranch land Brings together farmers, communities, conservationists, developers and government officials to work out solutions for the common goodAmerican Farmland Trust: American Farmland Trust Saving the land that sustains us Protecting the best land Planning for growth with agriculture in mind Keeping the land healthy Slide5: Current Sustainability (from ERS 1999) Productivity rose (from 1948-1980, 1.4%/yr; from 1980-1994, 3.3%/yr) (1.1 percent for nonfarm sector) Soil erosion declined from 3 billion to 2 billion tons/yr, no threat to productivity but high off-farm impacts ($2-8 billion/yr) Groundwater depletion rates fell Surface water quality improved but ag is a leading source of impairment Ag now a net supplier of wetlandsCurrent Sustainability(from ERS 1999): Current Sustainability(from ERS 1999) USDA ERS concludes: Environmental problems exist and the resource base is depreciating but the extent of the effects is in the range that can be adequately addressed by thoughtful policySustainability Challenge in the Future: Climate Change (SWCS 2003): Sustainability Challenge in the Future: Climate Change (SWCS 2003) Climate change (more severe rainfall events) may lead to: Increases in soil erosion ranging from 4 percent to 95 percent Increases in runoff from 6 percent to 100 percent in some locations Sustainability Challenge in the Future: Structural Changes: Sustainability Challenge in the Future: Structural Changes In 2002, 143,000 farms produced 75 percent of the value of all ag. output. Two million farms produced the remaining 25 percent In 2019, farming depends more on rural communities than rural communities depend on farming Global trade will be a key to future profitability but the United States may not be in the driver’s seatSustainability Challenge in the Future: Structural Changes: Sustainability Challenge in the Future: Structural Changes In 2019, farmers produce what they can sell, not simply sell what they produce Environmental issues shift to market-driven actions that achieve environmental benefits. Research and technology are increasingly global in nature The government’s role changes due to budget pressures and trade agreementsAgriculture is a Major Land Use: Agriculture is a Major Land Use Ag and Water Pollution: Ag and Water PollutionSustainability IndicatorsHeinz Center: Sustainability Indicators Heinz CenterSustainability IndicatorsHeinz Center: Sustainability Indicators Heinz CenterSustainability IndicatorsHeinz Center: Sustainability Indicators Heinz CenterSustainability IndicatorsHeinz Center: Sustainability Indicators Heinz CenterSustainability IndicatorsHeinz Center: Sustainability Indicators Heinz CenterSustainability IndicatorsHeinz Center: Sustainability Indicators Heinz CenterCurrent Sustainability:Conservation practices by Size: Current Sustainability: Conservation practices by SizeCurrent Sustainability:Conservation Practices by Type: Current Sustainability: Conservation Practices by TypeCurrent Sustainability:Conservation Practices by Size: Current Sustainability: Conservation Practices by SizeCurrent Sustainability:Use of GM Crops: Current Sustainability: Use of GM CropsAdoption of Sustainable PracticesERS 1999: Adoption of Sustainable Practices ERS 1999 Profitability drives most adoption Structural barriers impede adoption (lack of financial capital; labor availability) Site specificity means no one technology will be sustainable in all regions Economic risk may hinder adoptionChanging Behavior (from J. Salzman, 2005): Changing Behavior (from J. Salzman, 2005) Prescription: command and control regulation and Penalties: taxes and fees Payment: subsidy (direct payment or tax break) and Persuasion: information approach (goal of self-regulation) Property rights: privatization and allocation of the right to a resourcePrescription and Penalties:Conservation Compliance: Prescription and Penalties: Conservation Compliance To be eligible for Federal ag programs, producers must reduce soil erosion, protect wetlands, protect erosion-prone lands Unique policy tool – regulate, penalize (withhold benefits), but violation does not imply illegal activity Compliance rates still high (96 percent) Commodity program payments overlap with HEL cropland: Commodity program payments overlap with HEL croplandPrescription and Penalties:Expand Compliance: Prescription and Penalties: Expand Compliance Address nutrient run-off and leaching Uses overlap between programs and problems to address problems Payments generally exceed costs of addressing nutrient losses but might not be as effective in areas with excess manure USDA: prefers “sod saver” provisionPrescription and Penalties:Regulate Environmental Impacts (J. B. Ruhl): Prescription and Penalties: Regulate Environmental Impacts (J. B. Ruhl) Use conventional prescriptive regulation for large operations (CAFOs) Establish a national pesticide and fertilizer use reporting system Tax pesticide and fertilizer use Retire ecologically important land Require participation in watershed-based pollutant tradingPayment and Persuasion:Public’s Willingness to Pay: Payment and Persuasion: Public’s Willingness to PayWillingness to Adopt BMPs(from AFT survey 2001): Willingness to Adopt BMPs (from AFT survey 2001)Willingness to Adopt BMPs(from AFT survey 2001): Willingness to Adopt BMPs (from AFT survey 2001)Payment and Persuasion: Continue Funding Increases: Payment and Persuasion: Continue Funding IncreasesPayment and Persuasion: 2007 FB Recommendations: Payment and Persuasion: 2007 FB Recommendations Increase and mandate funding Consolidate and simplify programs, expand environmental benefits Enact New Initiatives AFT’s Cooperative Conservation Initiative and Conservation Loan Guarantee Refine existing programsPayment and Persuasion: Expand Adoption of BMPs: Payment and Persuasion: Expand Adoption of BMPs Profitability: Greater access to funds; markets for environmental services; eco-labels Structural barriers: Educate lenders; address labor shortages Site Specificity: Decentralize approach to research, development and tech transfer Economic risk: Use targeted BMP insurance Harness Property Rights: Ecosystem Services: Harness Property Rights: Ecosystem Services Retiring cropland reduces soil erosion, decreases nutrient, pesticide and sediment loadings. Provides permanent grass/tree cover. Decreased loadings improve water quality and plantings provide wildlife habitat. Services = Cleaner water, more wildlife Harness Property Rights:Ecosystem Services Vision: Harness Property Rights: Ecosystem Services Vision Farms provide ecosystem services along with food and fiber: Enjoy broad public support Considered “green box” under WTO Allows farmers to “sell” environmental services much like they sell agricultural products Provides a steady, reliable stream of revenueHarness Property Rights:Environmental Services: Harness Property Rights: Environmental Services Reduce pollutant runoff (N & P) – 40 water quality trading programs in United States, 22 allow trades with ag Reduce greenhouse gas emissions Restore wetland functions (100 million acres of wetland, 45 percent of initial base) were converted between 1780 and 1990 Provide wildlife habitatHarness Property RightsSequestering Carbon : Harness Property Rights Sequestering Carbon Harness Property Rights: Obstacles to Trading Credits: Harness Property Rights: Obstacles to Trading Credits Low demand - role of supporting regulation Difficulty in measuring may lead to high transaction costs (scientific uncertainty) Farmers may be reluctant to participate in program that is partly regulatory, even with compensation – afraid information shared could lead to regulationsHarness Property Rights:Ecosystem Services: Harness Property Rights: Ecosystem Services Mentioned in AFBF MAAPP report as a “exciting” opportunity USDA 2007 Farm Bill recommendations include $50 million in mandatory funding to develop uniform standards for quantifying environmental services, establish credit registries, and offer credit audit and certification servicesHarness Property Rights:Multiple Markets: Harness Property Rights: Multiple Markets Conservation planning has matured Millennium Ecosystem Assessment has categorized ecosystem services Economic valuation is helping set prices Tools for decision-making emerging Small scale efforts underwaySummary: Summary U.S. agriculture is becoming more sustainable We have a lot of policy tools to increase sustainability but they depend on political will Current focus on climate change and search for energy alternatives puts a spotlight on agriculture and provides us with an opportunity to shift to ecosystem services You do not have the permission to view this presentation. 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AAAS making ag sustainable2 Sarah Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINTLite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 33 Category: Entertainment License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: January 03, 2008 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript Making Policy to Achieve Sustainable Agriculture: Making Policy to Achieve Sustainable Agriculture American Farmland Trust Ann Sorensen AAAS: Feb. 18, 2007Making Policy to Achieve Sustainable Agriculture: Making Policy to Achieve Sustainable Agriculture Environmental Sustainability: Overview: How sustainable are we? Options: Regulate (compliance; new regulations) Increase Incentives (conservation programs) Create a paradigm shift (ecosystem services)American Farmland Trust: American Farmland Trust Founded in 1980 to save farm and ranch land Brings together farmers, communities, conservationists, developers and government officials to work out solutions for the common goodAmerican Farmland Trust: American Farmland Trust Saving the land that sustains us Protecting the best land Planning for growth with agriculture in mind Keeping the land healthy Slide5: Current Sustainability (from ERS 1999) Productivity rose (from 1948-1980, 1.4%/yr; from 1980-1994, 3.3%/yr) (1.1 percent for nonfarm sector) Soil erosion declined from 3 billion to 2 billion tons/yr, no threat to productivity but high off-farm impacts ($2-8 billion/yr) Groundwater depletion rates fell Surface water quality improved but ag is a leading source of impairment Ag now a net supplier of wetlandsCurrent Sustainability(from ERS 1999): Current Sustainability(from ERS 1999) USDA ERS concludes: Environmental problems exist and the resource base is depreciating but the extent of the effects is in the range that can be adequately addressed by thoughtful policySustainability Challenge in the Future: Climate Change (SWCS 2003): Sustainability Challenge in the Future: Climate Change (SWCS 2003) Climate change (more severe rainfall events) may lead to: Increases in soil erosion ranging from 4 percent to 95 percent Increases in runoff from 6 percent to 100 percent in some locations Sustainability Challenge in the Future: Structural Changes: Sustainability Challenge in the Future: Structural Changes In 2002, 143,000 farms produced 75 percent of the value of all ag. output. Two million farms produced the remaining 25 percent In 2019, farming depends more on rural communities than rural communities depend on farming Global trade will be a key to future profitability but the United States may not be in the driver’s seatSustainability Challenge in the Future: Structural Changes: Sustainability Challenge in the Future: Structural Changes In 2019, farmers produce what they can sell, not simply sell what they produce Environmental issues shift to market-driven actions that achieve environmental benefits. Research and technology are increasingly global in nature The government’s role changes due to budget pressures and trade agreementsAgriculture is a Major Land Use: Agriculture is a Major Land Use Ag and Water Pollution: Ag and Water PollutionSustainability IndicatorsHeinz Center: Sustainability Indicators Heinz CenterSustainability IndicatorsHeinz Center: Sustainability Indicators Heinz CenterSustainability IndicatorsHeinz Center: Sustainability Indicators Heinz CenterSustainability IndicatorsHeinz Center: Sustainability Indicators Heinz CenterSustainability IndicatorsHeinz Center: Sustainability Indicators Heinz CenterSustainability IndicatorsHeinz Center: Sustainability Indicators Heinz CenterCurrent Sustainability:Conservation practices by Size: Current Sustainability: Conservation practices by SizeCurrent Sustainability:Conservation Practices by Type: Current Sustainability: Conservation Practices by TypeCurrent Sustainability:Conservation Practices by Size: Current Sustainability: Conservation Practices by SizeCurrent Sustainability:Use of GM Crops: Current Sustainability: Use of GM CropsAdoption of Sustainable PracticesERS 1999: Adoption of Sustainable Practices ERS 1999 Profitability drives most adoption Structural barriers impede adoption (lack of financial capital; labor availability) Site specificity means no one technology will be sustainable in all regions Economic risk may hinder adoptionChanging Behavior (from J. Salzman, 2005): Changing Behavior (from J. Salzman, 2005) Prescription: command and control regulation and Penalties: taxes and fees Payment: subsidy (direct payment or tax break) and Persuasion: information approach (goal of self-regulation) Property rights: privatization and allocation of the right to a resourcePrescription and Penalties:Conservation Compliance: Prescription and Penalties: Conservation Compliance To be eligible for Federal ag programs, producers must reduce soil erosion, protect wetlands, protect erosion-prone lands Unique policy tool – regulate, penalize (withhold benefits), but violation does not imply illegal activity Compliance rates still high (96 percent) Commodity program payments overlap with HEL cropland: Commodity program payments overlap with HEL croplandPrescription and Penalties:Expand Compliance: Prescription and Penalties: Expand Compliance Address nutrient run-off and leaching Uses overlap between programs and problems to address problems Payments generally exceed costs of addressing nutrient losses but might not be as effective in areas with excess manure USDA: prefers “sod saver” provisionPrescription and Penalties:Regulate Environmental Impacts (J. B. Ruhl): Prescription and Penalties: Regulate Environmental Impacts (J. B. Ruhl) Use conventional prescriptive regulation for large operations (CAFOs) Establish a national pesticide and fertilizer use reporting system Tax pesticide and fertilizer use Retire ecologically important land Require participation in watershed-based pollutant tradingPayment and Persuasion:Public’s Willingness to Pay: Payment and Persuasion: Public’s Willingness to PayWillingness to Adopt BMPs(from AFT survey 2001): Willingness to Adopt BMPs (from AFT survey 2001)Willingness to Adopt BMPs(from AFT survey 2001): Willingness to Adopt BMPs (from AFT survey 2001)Payment and Persuasion: Continue Funding Increases: Payment and Persuasion: Continue Funding IncreasesPayment and Persuasion: 2007 FB Recommendations: Payment and Persuasion: 2007 FB Recommendations Increase and mandate funding Consolidate and simplify programs, expand environmental benefits Enact New Initiatives AFT’s Cooperative Conservation Initiative and Conservation Loan Guarantee Refine existing programsPayment and Persuasion: Expand Adoption of BMPs: Payment and Persuasion: Expand Adoption of BMPs Profitability: Greater access to funds; markets for environmental services; eco-labels Structural barriers: Educate lenders; address labor shortages Site Specificity: Decentralize approach to research, development and tech transfer Economic risk: Use targeted BMP insurance Harness Property Rights: Ecosystem Services: Harness Property Rights: Ecosystem Services Retiring cropland reduces soil erosion, decreases nutrient, pesticide and sediment loadings. Provides permanent grass/tree cover. Decreased loadings improve water quality and plantings provide wildlife habitat. Services = Cleaner water, more wildlife Harness Property Rights:Ecosystem Services Vision: Harness Property Rights: Ecosystem Services Vision Farms provide ecosystem services along with food and fiber: Enjoy broad public support Considered “green box” under WTO Allows farmers to “sell” environmental services much like they sell agricultural products Provides a steady, reliable stream of revenueHarness Property Rights:Environmental Services: Harness Property Rights: Environmental Services Reduce pollutant runoff (N & P) – 40 water quality trading programs in United States, 22 allow trades with ag Reduce greenhouse gas emissions Restore wetland functions (100 million acres of wetland, 45 percent of initial base) were converted between 1780 and 1990 Provide wildlife habitatHarness Property RightsSequestering Carbon : Harness Property Rights Sequestering Carbon Harness Property Rights: Obstacles to Trading Credits: Harness Property Rights: Obstacles to Trading Credits Low demand - role of supporting regulation Difficulty in measuring may lead to high transaction costs (scientific uncertainty) Farmers may be reluctant to participate in program that is partly regulatory, even with compensation – afraid information shared could lead to regulationsHarness Property Rights:Ecosystem Services: Harness Property Rights: Ecosystem Services Mentioned in AFBF MAAPP report as a “exciting” opportunity USDA 2007 Farm Bill recommendations include $50 million in mandatory funding to develop uniform standards for quantifying environmental services, establish credit registries, and offer credit audit and certification servicesHarness Property Rights:Multiple Markets: Harness Property Rights: Multiple Markets Conservation planning has matured Millennium Ecosystem Assessment has categorized ecosystem services Economic valuation is helping set prices Tools for decision-making emerging Small scale efforts underwaySummary: Summary U.S. agriculture is becoming more sustainable We have a lot of policy tools to increase sustainability but they depend on political will Current focus on climate change and search for energy alternatives puts a spotlight on agriculture and provides us with an opportunity to shift to ecosystem services