On Monday, Ag Secretary Brooke Rollins announced the cancelation of the Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities.  The move comes following, what the Ag Secretary called a thorough line-by-line review of each of the Biden-era partnerships; noting that the majority of the projects had sky-high administration fees, which in many instances provided less than half of the federal funding directly to farmers.  Select projects may continue if it is demonstrated that a significant amount of the federal funds awarded will go to farmers.  

 

USDA says it’s reformed and overhauled the Biden-era Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities Initiative into the Advancing Markets for Producers (AMP) initiative, and the USDA has identified changes to align the initiative with current Trump Administration priorities. USDA will review existing grant agreements based on three Farmer First policy priorities:

  • A minimum of 65% of federal funds must go to producers;
  • Grant recipients must have enrolled at least one producer as of 12/31/2024; and
  • Grant recipients must have made a payment to at least one producer as of 12/31/2024.

 

“The Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities initiative was largely built to advance the green new scam at the benefit of NGOs, not American farmers,” said Secretary Rollins. “The concerns of farmers took a backseat during the Biden Administration. During my short time as Secretary, I have heard directly from our farmers that many of the USDA partnerships are overburdened by red tape, have ambiguous goals, and require complex reporting that push farmers onto the sidelines. We are correcting these mistakes and redirecting our efforts to set our farmers up for an unprecedented era of prosperity."

 

USDA said it will honor all eligible expenses incurred prior to April 13, 2025.

 

If you have a story idea for the PNW Ag Network, call (509) 547-1618, or e-mail glenn.vaagen@townsquaremedia.com 

 

 

More From PNW Ag Network