Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 58— - ERODIBLE LAND AND WETLAND CONSERVATION AND RESERVE PROGRAM › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES CONSERVATION PROGRAM › Part Part IV— - Environmental Quality Incentives Program and Conservation Stewardship Program › Subpart subpart a— - environmental quality incentives program › § 3839aa–8
Provides money for competitive grants and direct payments to test and spread new conservation ideas that help the environment while supporting farming and forest work. The Secretary can give grants to state, local, private, and nonprofit groups, community colleges, and individuals to run projects that involve farmers, use matching funds, share new tools (like ways to cut pollution or store carbon in soil), increase specialty crop conservation, support urban or indoor farming, test monitoring systems at field edges, run on-farm research and demos, or pilot new technologies. The program must also pay producers to address air quality problems and meet rules, using $37,500,000 each year from fiscal 2019 through 2031. Using $25,000,000 each year from fiscal 2019 through 2031, the Secretary will run on-farm trials of “new or innovative” conservation approaches. Eligible entities are third-party private agricultural businesses, nonprofits with farm experience, or government groups. Examples of new approaches include precision farming tools, better nutrient management and recovery, soil-health systems that raise soil carbon, water management, resource-saving crop rotations, cover crops, and irrigation improvements. Trials are done with producers or through eligible entities. Producers in trials get payments, including money for income they might lose. Agreements must be at least 3 years and can be longer for good reasons. Producers must meet the adjusted gross income rules in section 1308–3a(b)(1), which the Secretary will enforce. Eligible entities must report payments to the Secretary each year and may not use trial funds for their own administrative costs. The Secretary will give technical help, choose trials in different regions, run a soil-health demonstration that measures soil carbon, start a study by September 30, 2020, and send annual reports to the House and Senate Agriculture Committees. By September 30, 2019 and every two years after, the Secretary must report on funding and results, and create a public database of effective practices in a form that does not identify individual farmers.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 3839aa–8
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73