Congress Appropriated $4.5B for Regenerative, Why Is USDA Only Giving It $700M?

Regenerative and organic farmers have never needed you more! The Trump Administration has been crashing a wrecking ball into the U.S. Department of Agriculture all year. Now it wants us to believe that two pennies is better than a dollar bill. Two is more than one, right?

After refusing to disburse $6.062 billion appropriated by Congress for family famers adopting regenerative agriculture practices and serving local markets, we're now supposed to celebrate because the USDA is earmarking $700 million for regenerative agriculture, when it's given $40 billion in bailouts to industrial agriculture this year.

The $700 million isn't new money, the USDA is taking it from the combined $4.515 billion annual budget appropriated by Congress for two regenerative agriculture programs, the Environmental Quality Incentives Program and the Conservation Stewardship Program.

Why isn't all of that money going to regenerative agriculture? If regenerative only gets $700 million, that means $3.815 billion (84 percent) goes to factory farms and pesticide-drenched genetically modified field crops. Admittedly, Trump's USDA isn't the first to misappropriate EQIP and CSP funds this way, but it is the first to celebrate it.

TAKE ACTION! Remind Congress: It Appropriated $4.5B for Regenerative, It Can't Let USDA Only Give It $700M!

One-hundred percent of EQIP and CSP money should be going to regenerative agriculture, but Trump's USDA is only giving it $400 million of EQIP's $3.155 billion annual budget and $300 million of CSP's $1.36 billion. The money for regenerative hardly amounts to a rounding error, but the new spin is, instead of being angry about how little support there is to transition to regenerative, farmers are supposed to celebrate it!

Trump's USDA is continuing the terrible tradition of giving the lion's share of EQIP money to factory farms to manage manure lagoons and allocating a most of CSP's to pesticide-drenched genetically modified row crop producers for what Bayer and the other agrochemical companies have dubbed "precision agriculture." What it amounts to is adjusting the nozzles on their sprayers to make sure they use the “right” amount of toxins—with no promise they’ll use any less! CSP money is also diverted to "no-till" systems that use pesticides instead of tillage to clear fields.

 More than 800 million pounds of pesticides are used to grow our food in the U.S. every year, and most of these pesticides are toxic to human health. Decades of data links the pesticides widely used in conventional agriculture to cancer, reproductive toxicity, birth defects, asthma, endocrine disruption, and more. Children and infants in utero are the most vulnerable, and this early exposure has life-long impacts.

Organic farming is an important alternative -- more than 900 synthetic pesticides allowed in conventional agriculture are banned in organic. Research shows that an organic diet rapidly and dramatically reduces our exposure to toxic pesticides. One study found that just one week on a fully organic diet can reduce pesticide levels in your body by up to 95 percent! Organic farming also helps protect the people who grow our food and their rural communities from toxic exposure.

Those of us who eat organic to reduce our pesticide exposure depend on the federal USDA National Organic Program (NOP) to enforce the organic standard. Citizen enforcement through lawsuits has been tried, but has almost always failed because the courts say the federal government has the exclusive authority to say what the organic standard is and how to enforce it. The USDA NOP is all we've got, and its ability to do its essential work has been hugely impacted by the USDA staffing cuts and departures triggered by Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency. More than 18,000 USDA employees are gone since January, including roughly a third of the NOP team.

This comes after Congress left organic farmers without funding for more than a year, from when the Farm Bill expired in September 2024 until the so-called "One Big Beautiful Bill" was passed in July 2025, funding that won't become available until 2026. The OBBB was a fatal blow struck at the heart of the Farm Bill. It gutted Food Stamps, not only to give money to rich landowners renting their land to industrial tenant farmers as past Farm Bills shamelessly had, but to cover other federal agencies, the War Department being the most expensive. The OBBB allocated $8 million a year for the National Organic Certification Cost-Share Program and $10 million for the Organic Production and Market Data Initiative. We'll see if farmers ever get the money.

USDA Took $6 Billion From Regenerative, Now It's Giving $700 Million?

The Trump Administration's attacks on regenerative agriculture and family farmers serving local markets began right away when the USDA refused to release a huge chunk of the $19.5 billion Congress appropriated through the Inflation Reduction Act for programs administered by the Natural Resources Conservation Service and the Agricultural Marketing Service. That looks like a very big number, and is for programs that help family farms adopt regenerative agriculture practices, but this money simply offset cuts made to these programs in the 2018 Farm Bill.

Trump's USDA hasn't been transparent about the total amount it's withholding, but the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition estimates it's at least $6 billion.

One of the programs it canceled is the Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities. Organic Consumers Association's partner organization, Regeneration International, was among the organizations affected. RI managed a grant on behalf of a wide network of sub-awardees including the Regenerative Agriculture AllianceTree-Range FarmsFreshwater Society, and new partnerships with organizations like A Greener Worldthe Nature ConservancySavanna InstituteOther Half Processing, and Marbleseed—just to name a few. This five-year, $5 million grant was to help farmers planting oats and other small grains to transition to regenerative systems. In its first year, the project enrolled 29 producers in the Midwest managing 2,500 acres. RI distributed $175,780.50 in incentive payments to these farmers, helping them offset the upfront costs of adopting conservation practices for regenerative systems.

Meanwhile, the USDA gave the biggest grain and oilseed farmerswho grow for factory farms, junk food processors, and exporters$40 billion in bailouts!

If Fully Funded, and Used Just for Regenerative, the Conservation Stewardship Program Could Save Family Farms, the Soil, and Our Health

The Conservation Stewardship Program was launched in the 2008 Farm Bill. If Congress fully funded it, which it never has, it could help every farmer adopt the regenerative practices that decrease pesticides and protect against erosion, while increasing yields and making food more nutritiousall by improving soil health.

At its height, the Conservation Stewardship Program enrolled 72 million acres—about 7 percent of all working lands in the U.S., including crop, forest, pasture and range land, but the program never reached its full potential. More than three out of four farmers who want to participate in the Conservation Stewardship Program have been closed out every year. Things got worse when the 2018 Farm Bill severely reduced its funding.

Congress got back on the right track with the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act, making climate-smartinvestments in the Conservation Stewardship Program that were projected to increase the amount of carbon stored in working lands (a key measure of soil health) by 70 million metric tons of carbon-dioxide equivalent per year by 2030. Agriculture is responsible for 10 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, with emissions in the range of 700 million metric tons of carbon-dioxide equivalent per year. So, we’re talking 10 percent of 10 percent or 1 percent of total U.S. greenhouse gas emissions. It seems small, but that offsets the emissions of 6 million cars. If that figure were quadrupled, which it easily could be given that 4 times as many farmers have tried to enroll in the Conservation Stewardship Program, it would reduce total greenhouse gas emissions by 4 percent—offsetting the emissions of 64 million cars.

That's all just a pipe dream now. It's clear that Trump's USDA isn't much interested in regenerative agriculture for the sake of soil health, human health, the climate, or anything else.

  

TAKE ACTION! Remind Congress: It Appropriated $4.5B for Regenerative, It Can't Let USDA Only Give It $700M!

Personal Information

*SAMPLE TEXT TO YOUR MEMBERS OF CONGRESS*

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Dear Members of Congress,

In the "One Big Beautiful Bill," Congress authorized $4.515 billion in yearly combined spending for two regenerative agriculture programs administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) and the Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP).

Now the USDA has announced that $700 million of that total will go to regenerative agriculture. That's only 16 percent. Where will the other $3.815 billion go?

To factory farms to manage their leaking lagoons of animal waste and to the pesticide-drenched genetically modified field crop growers so that they can pretend to poison us a little less using "precision agriculture" and, instead of plowing, soak the soil with carcinogenic glyphosate- and atrazine-based herbicides.

Trump's USDA isn't the first to pull this bait-and-switch, but it is the first to celebrate it.

This stunt comes after the agency began the year by refusing to disburse $6.062 billion appropriated by Congress for family farmers adopting regenerative agriculture practices and serving local markets.

It's time for this charade to stop. Congress must get back to regular business and pass a new Farm Bill reauthorization that requires farmers seeking EQIP and CSP funding to regenerate the soil.

Soil health is essential to prevent erosion from wind and rain, to protect crops in the face of drought and floods, to reduce human exposure to toxic chemicals, and to increase nutrient density.

The priority should be transitioning corn growers to cattle ranchers. Why risk the ability of the soil to produce food into the future by growing corn for cows kept in feedlots, when you can regenerate the soil with well-managed grass-fed beef production? As Wendell Berry sarcastically scoffed, "The genius of American farm experts is very well demonstrated here: they can take a solution and divide it neatly into two problems."

It's time to stop these problems. Congress can start by preventing regenerative agriculture programs like EQIP and CSP from being used to exacerbate them.

Thank you.

Sincerely,

Your Name