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Agricultural News


State Purchase of Agricultural Conservation Easement Programs Permanently Protect 3.1 Million Acres as of January 2020

Thu, 19 Nov 2020 07:46:17 CST

State Purchase of Agricultural Conservation Easement Programs Permanently Protect 3.1 Million Acres as of January 2020 Today, American Farmland Trust's Farmland Information Center, released results from its annual "Status of State Purchase of Agricultural Conservation Easement Programs" summarizing state PACE activity through the end of December 2019. Purchase of Agricultural Conservation Easement programs use public funds to compensate property owners for keeping their land available for agriculture.

As of January 2020, thirty states have authorized programs and 29 have funded easement acquisitions. Together they have permanently protected more than 3.1 million acres acquiring upwards of 17,000 agricultural conservation easements since inception. Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware and Massachusetts lead the nation in easements acquired while Colorado, Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, and Vermont stood out for acres protected to date (see maps).

According to a recent report by AFT, "Farms Under Threat: The States of the States," 11 million acres of the nation's farmland and ranchland was lost or fragmented between 2001 and 2016. PACE programs are one of the most effective state policy responses to development. The report's Agricultural Land Protection Scorecard examined a range of approaches including PACE, to address threats to agricultural land.

"Since the late 1970s, state PACE programs have invested more than $4.5 billion to save farm and ranch land," said Jennifer Dempsey, Farmland Information Center director. "This funding has leveraged an additional $3 billion from ACEP-ALE and other federal programs, local governments, land trusts, foundations and individuals."

New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Massachusetts, and Colorado have spent the largest sums to date; Delaware, Maryland, Vermont, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania have contributed the most on a per capita basis.

In 2019, Pennsylvania, Colorado, Texas, California, and Maryland led the nation in acres protected during a single year, each saving more than 10,000 acres. Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, and Ohio acquired the most easements and accounted for 79 percent of the total number of easement acquisitions (see tables). While state spending declined by 13 percent overall, seven states increased dollars spent on PACE in 2019; five states increased their contribution by 23 percent or more over 2018.

"It's encouraging to see states like New York and North Carolina devote more to protecting agricultural land," Dempsey said. "Agricultural land is critical infrastructure for local food production, but states invest less than a penny to save farmland for each dollar spent on highways."

She continued, "It is also heartening to identify new programs like Oregon to add to future surveys. The addition of new programs, especially in underserved regions like the Corn Belt, is necessary to double permanently protected farmland by 2040, reduce conversion and prioritize the best land. To reach these goals, states must do more. Currently, for every acre protected by PACE programs, nine were converted to other uses"

AFT's Farmland Information Center has been conducting its annual survey of State PACE programs since 1995. Other nationwide surveys conducted by the Farmland Information Center include a survey of local PACE programs, and of land trusts that protect agricultural land. The data collected through these surveys help AFT track the progress of on-the-ground programs working to save our nation's farmland.

For more information on Purchase of Agricultural Conservation Easements, see the PACE fact sheet and other PACE resources on the Farmland Information Center website. The FIC is a clearinghouse for information about farmland protection and stewardship and is a public/private partnership between the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service and American Farmland Trust.

   

 

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