LandsofAmerica.com - Land Resources / News / High Crop Prices Squeezing US Farmland Conservation Program
#1 in Land for Sale Online
Land ID Search
International Paper Timberland for Sale
Click Below to Find a Farm or Ranch for Sale
America
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming

Land for Sale
sort by
Most Popular
Most Expensive
Most Acreage

Land Resources / News / High Crop Prices Squeezing US Farmland Conservation Program
High Crop Prices Squeezing US Farmland Conservation Program (complete article from source)
Source: VOANews.com, by Brian Wagner
May 14, 2008

As crop prices remain high, farmers and other landowners are working to expand their output and take advantage of big profits for wheat, corn and soybeans. The boom is creating pressure to begin farming on lands enrolled in U.S. environmental programs intended to rebuild native prairie and wildlife habitats. VOA's Brian Wagner has this report.

 
Ernie Roehrich's land in Linton, North Dakota has been enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program, but he opted out of the program lured by high prices, 15 Apr 2008
Rising crop prices are creating concern about the price of food at markets around the world. But for farmers of wheat, corn and other crops, the potential for reaping new profits is hard to overlook.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) estimates farmers around the globe are seeking to take advantage, with output of wheat, rice and other grains expected to rise this year. Officials say global wheat production will reach a record level over the next year, up seven percent from last year, thanks to favorable weather conditions and record market prices for wheat.

The United States is the world's top wheat exporter, and much of it grows in a region known as the grain belt where farmers are looking at ways to grow more.

Erica Peterson, marketing specialist with the North Dakota Wheat Commission, says some landowners in the state are now farming lands that had been left idle or enrolled in conservation programs.

"Whereas a few years ago it was probably more profitable to leave that land idle, when wheat prices were $3 or $4 [per bushel]," she noted.  "Now if they can get $8, $9, $10 for their wheat, it is obviously more economical to use that land to grow a crop."

In North Dakota and other states, the challenge is finding good farmland that is not already being used for agriculture or for other ends.

Bruce Babcock, director of the Center for Agricultural and Rural Development at Iowa State University, says the push to expand U.S. farmland began last year and is picking up steam.

"We've seen [crop] prices increase in the last year 20-30 percent and we only got a one percent increase in land," he noted.  "This year we're seeing a price increase of another 40 or 50 percent and I would be surprised if total land planted in the United States is up more than two or three percent this year."

One of the biggest possible sources of new farmland is the 14 million hectares held in a environmental program known as the Conservation Reserve Program. The federal program is to pay out nearly $2 billion this year to landowners in exchange for planting grass, shrub or trees to benefit the local environment. Advocates say the effort combats soil erosion, improves air and water quality, and provides habitats for native birds and other wildlife.

Last year, the 10-year contracts of some program members came up for renewal, and scores of farmers in grain-producing states decided to leave the program and begin farming wheat, corn or other crops. North Dakota lost more than 165,000 hectares in conservation, more than any other state in the country.

Jim Jost is a conservation program specialist in North Dakota for the Farm Service Agency, which administers the program.

"You can see our highest losses in North Dakota are in the south-central part of the state and that seems to be influenced more by increased corn and soybean production in that area," he said.

Jost says the decision to leave the program is difficult for landowners committed to environmental concerns, but he says there is a strong economic incentive as long as crop prices are high.

Part of the blame for high food prices is the development of alternative energy supplies, such as ethanol from corn in the United States. Nature groups say the development of biofuels threatens to reverse some of the environmental benefits of the Conservation Reserve Program, which was launched in 1985.

Scott Stephens is director of conservation planning for Ducks Unlimited, which helps preserve and restore wetlands for waterfowl. He says the Conservation Reserve Program has had a profound impact in the grain belt and elsewhere.

"Now we see all of those positive impacts that were all funded by taxpayers over the past 20 years are disappearing, are being washed away in a rush for new sources of energy via biofuels," he said.

Bruce Babcock says one alternative to pulling more lands out of conservation is to look outside the country for potential farmlands elsewhere, especially Brazil, Russia and parts of sub-Saharan Africa. He says Brazil alone has the potential to develop up to 100 million hectares in new cropland.

He says those kind of decisions hinge on foreign policy as well as environmental concerns.

"If we place a very high value on domestic wildlife habitat, then we would suggest that it would be better to develop land overseas," he added.  "If we don't care so much about our domestic wildlife habitat, then we should concentrate on developing our own land first."

Either way, Babcock says he does not expect crop prices to remain high, because farmers in the United States and elsewhere already are working to increase production.



Click here for complete article from VOANews.com
Signup | Contact Us

View All Land, Farm, Ranch, and Waterfront Properties for Sale

Land for Sale | Alabama Land | Alaska Land | Arizona Land | Arkansas Land | California Land | Colorado Land | Connecticut Land | Delaware Land | Florida Land | Georgia Land | Hawaii Land | Idaho Land | Illinois Land | Indiana Land | Iowa Land | Kansas Land | Kentucky Land | Louisiana Land | Maine Land | Maryland Land | Massachusetts Land | Michigan Land | Minnesota Land | Mississippi Land | Missouri Land | Montana Land | Nebraska Land | Nevada Land | New Hampshire Land | New Jersey Land | New Mexico Land | New York Land | North Carolina Land | North Dakota Land | Ohio Land | Oklahoma Land | Oregon Land | Pennsylvania Land | Rhode Island Land | South Carolina Land | South Dakota Land | Tennessee Land | Texas Land | Utah Land | Vermont Land | Virginia Land | Washington Land | West Virginia Land | Wisconsin Land | Wyoming Land

Rural Homes for Sale | Alabama Homes | Alaska Homes | Arizona Homes | Arkansas Homes | California Homes | Colorado Homes | Connecticut Homes | Delaware Homes | Florida Homes | Georgia Homes | Hawaii Homes | Idaho Homes | Illinois Homes | Indiana Homes | Iowa Homes | Kansas Homes | Kentucky Homes | Louisiana Homes | Maine Homes | Maryland Homes | Massachusetts Homes | Michigan Homes | Minnesota Homes | Mississippi Homes | Missouri Homes | Montana Homes | Nebraska Homes | Nevada Homes | New Hampshire Homes | New Jersey Homes | New Mexico Homes | New York Homes | North Carolina Homes | North Dakota Homes | Ohio Homes | Oklahoma Homes | Oregon Homes | Pennsylvania Homes | Rhode Island Homes | South Carolina Homes | South Dakota Homes | Tennessee Homes | Texas Homes | Utah Homes | Vermont Homes | Virginia Homes | Washington Homes | West Virginia Homes | Wisconsin Homes | Wyoming Homes

Lake Houses for Sale | Alabama Lake Houses | Alaska Lake Houses | Arizona Lake Houses | Arkansas Lake Houses | California Lake Houses | Colorado Lake Houses | Connecticut Lake Houses | Delaware Lake Houses | Florida Lake Houses | Georgia Lake Houses | Hawaii Lake Houses | Idaho Lake Houses | Illinois Lake Houses | Indiana Lake Houses | Iowa Lake Houses | Kansas Lake Houses | Kentucky Lake Houses | Louisiana Lake Houses | Maine Lake Houses | Maryland Lake Houses | Massachusetts Lake Houses | Michigan Lake Houses | Minnesota Lake Houses | Mississippi Lake Houses | Missouri Lake Houses | Montana Lake Houses | Nebraska Lake Houses | Nevada Lake Houses | New Hampshire Lake Houses | New Jersey Lake Houses | New Mexico Lake Houses | New York Lake Houses | North Carolina Lake Houses | North Dakota Lake Houses | Ohio Lake Houses | Oklahoma Lake Houses | Oregon Lake Houses | Pennsylvania Lake Houses | Rhode Island Lake Houses | South Carolina Lake Houses | South Dakota Lake Houses | Tennessee Lake Houses | Texas Lake Houses | Utah Lake Houses | Vermont Lake Houses | Virginia Lake Houses | Washington Lake Houses | West Virginia Lake Houses | Wisconsin Lake Houses | Wyoming Lake Houses

Powered by LandsofAmerica.com
COPYRIGHT © 2003-Current, All Rights Reserved
Terms of Use