Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 107— - RENEWABLE ENERGY RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT › § 8111
Creates and runs the Biomass Crop Assistance Program (BCAP) to help people grow, harvest, store, and move renewable biomass to nearby conversion facilities and to pay producers for delivery work. Key terms: BCAP is the program; a BCAP project area is an approved zone of producers near a conversion facility; contract acreage is land under a BCAP contract; eligible crop is a renewable biomass crop (with some exclusions); eligible land is certain private farm and nonindustrial forest land or expiring CRP/ACEP acres (Federal or State land and other named lands are excluded); eligible material is renewable biomass harvested under specific rules (some materials are excluded); producer is an owner or operator on contract acreage; project sponsor is either a group of producers or a biomass conversion facility; socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher is defined elsewhere in law. Project sponsors must apply with boundaries, participating producers, a facility commitment, and evidence of funding if needed. The Secretary will choose project areas based on crop volumes, other biomass, local economic impact and ownership opportunities, participation by beginning or socially disadvantaged farmers, environmental effects, production variety, and other factors. Approved producers sign contracts with the Secretary that require data sharing, meeting conservation and wetland rules, and following a conservation or forest stewardship plan. Contracts run up to 5 years for annual or perennial crops and up to 15 years for woody biomass, and cropland base and yield history are preserved. The Secretary must pay establishment costs up to 50 percent of establishment costs, not more than $500 per acre (up to $750 per acre for socially disadvantaged farmers), and set annual payments that can be reduced for certain actions or violations. The Secretary can pay for collection, harvest, storage, and transport to a facility and may match up to $1 for each $1 provided by the facility, not to exceed $20 per dry ton for 2 years; producers who get these delivery payments must agree to a reduction in their annual payment. Not later than 4 years after February 7, 2014, the Secretary must report to the House and Senate Agriculture Committees on how best-practice information from participants was shared. The law authorizes $25,000,000 for each fiscal year 2019 through 2023, requires that 10 percent to 50 percent of each year’s funds be used for collection/harvest/transport/storage payments, and makes funds available for technical assistance effective for fiscal year 2014 and later.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 8111
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73