Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 64— - AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH, EXTENSION, AND TEACHING › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER X— - FUNDING AND MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS › § 3319k
Creates a pilot program called the Agriculture Advanced Research and Development Authority (AGARDA) inside the Department of Agriculture to speed up high‑risk, high‑reward research and development for agriculture and food. AGARDA must work to prevent and respond to accidental and intentional threats to food and farming, help turn scientific discoveries into real products and tools, remove barriers to new agricultural technologies, and do projects industry won’t do alone because they are too risky or costly. A Director, picked by the Chief Scientist, runs AGARDA. AGARDA can run calls for proposals, give grants, sign contracts or special “other transactions” like the Defense Department can under 10 U.S.C. 4021, test prototypes, help with approvals, form teams from government, industry, and universities, require project data to be shared with the Secretary (with specific safety and trade secret protections and a 5‑year protection for certain commercial information), use milestone payments and stop projects that miss goals, report yearly to Congress, and—after 3 years of operation—be evaluated by the Comptroller General with a report finished within 1 year after that evaluation starts. The Secretary must publish a strategic plan within 360 days after December 20, 2018, and share it with interested parties. Key defined terms in one line each: “advanced research and development” — work that speeds early‑stage innovations and develops prototypes or commercialization; “agricultural technology” — machines and equipment for new farm uses; “Director” — the AGARDA head; “other transaction” — a nonstandard agreement instead of a usual grant or contract; “person” — anyone from an individual to a government agency or college; “qualified product or project” — tech or countermeasures for growing, handling, plant or animal threats; “research tool” — devices, materials, or software that help make those products. A Treasury fund for AGARDA may hold money and accept recoveries or royalties, and $50,000,000 is authorized for each fiscal year 2019 through 2023. The authority ends 5 years after December 20, 2018, except for the data‑protection rule and awards or contracts made before that end.
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Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 3319k
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73