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EQIP

Swine Producers and the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) in the 2002 Farm Bill

BACKGROUND

  • The National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) worked closely with Congress and the Administration on the Farm Bill and the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP).
  • They were leaders in a coalition of livestock interests that helped secure a total of $11 billion in EQIP funding over ten years to help livestock producers of all sizes address their most pressing water and air quality issues.
    • $400 mil in '02, $700 mil in '03, $1 bil in '04, $1.2 bil. in '05 and '06, $1.3 bil. in '07-'11.
  • Sixty percent of EQIP funds, on a national basis, will be directed to livestock producers' conservation needs. This is an increase from 50% of total funds in the last farm bill.
  • USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) is planning to produce "interim final regulations" for EQIP before the end of the year. Interim final regulations will allow USDA to begin implementing the program as final details are being determined.


KEY POINTS

1. EQIP must assist family owned and operated commercial swine operations of all sizes.

  • Environmental issues must be addressed on both small and large operations for EQIP to fulfill its environmental purposes.
    • 80% of hogs are produced on operations with more than 1000 AU's. Half of these hogs are produced on operations with less than 10,000 animal units.
    • Limiting EQIP to operations with less than 1000 AUs would prevent the program from addressing manure issues from 80% of the animals in this sector!
  • Congress debated and finally adopted a "payment limit," as opposed to a size limit, to help ensure EQIP can, in fact, meet this objective.
    • Congress adopted a $450,000 payment limitation for ALL contracts entered into by an individual or single tax i.d. number over the life of the farm bill.

2. The costs of Comprehensive Nutrient Management Plans (CNMPs) and the proposed CAFO rule will drive concentration in the livestock sector.

  • The Clean Water Action Plan advocated that every animal feeding operation obtain and implement a Comprehensive Nutrient Management Plan.
  • USDA estimates the cost of full CNMP implementation for all animal feeding operations at approximately $20 billion over 10 years.
  • CNMPs will be one of the 2 or 3 top new areas of emphasis in the upcoming EPA Confined Animal Feeding Operation (CAFO) rule (see the "CAFO Rule Fact Sheet").
    • The surest way to help independent producers stay independent is to provide them with financial and technical assistance to meet these costs.
  • EQIP can and should make a big contribution to helping swine producers meet these costs.
  • CNMPs will be great business planning documents for swine producers, as well as their operations' individualized blueprints to improve their environmental performance.
  • NPPC is prepared to work with their members and state associations to help educate swine producers to ensure they get the best, most cost effective CNMP possible.

3. A large number of the most critical EQIP implementation decisions will be made by NRCS at the state and local level

  • These decisions will include:
    • The specific practices that will receive financial assistance
    • The cost share and incentive payment rates
    • How funds will be allocated across the state and to what issues, and
    • Many others
  • The NRCS State Conservationists will be responsible for a large number of these decisions.
  • State Conservationists will make extensive use of the State Technical Committee to help guide these decisions.
    • The State Technical Committees and State Conservationists are at work now on specific EQIP focuses for their state. It is not too early for producers and their state associations to get engaged to help make sure EQIP works in their states.
  • NPPC will work with the state swine associations to ensure that they are getting the assistance they need to help producers participate effectively in this process and these decisions.

Links

Natural Resources Conservation Service
http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/farmbill/2002/index.html




 
 

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