Order Code RS21740
Updated July 24, 2006
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Conservation Security Program:
Implementation and Current Issues
Tadlock Cowan
Analyst in Agriculture, Natural Resources, and Rural Development Policy
Resources, Science, and Industry Division
Summary
The Conservation Security Program (CSP), authorized in the 2002 farm bill (P.L.
107-171), is a voluntary program that provides financial and technical assistance to
promote conservation and improvement of natural resources on tribal and private
working lands within selected watersheds. CSP is administered by USDA’s Natural
Resource Conservation Service (NRCS). Financial assistance is based on three tiers of
participation, with each tier representing a higher degree of resource management
standards. Contracts extend from 5 to 10 years.
The first enrollment for CSP was in July 2004 and included 18 watersheds in 22
states. The 2004 enrollment was controversial because NRCS instituted strict eligibility
criteria for enrollment that were not included in the CSP authorization. A second
enrollment in November 2005 was implemented in 220 watersheds nationwide. These
two enrollments resulted in 15,000 contracts with landowners on 12.1 million acres of
working agricultural lands. On February 7, 2006, a third CSP enrollment was
announced. This enrollment includes 60 additional watersheds, and also encompasses
Guam and the Caribbean. FY2006 funding is limited to $259 million, with
approximately $50 million available for new contracts. For FY2006, 4,404 contracts
were accepted, adding more than 3.7 million acres of private land in 60 watersheds.
Most of these contracts fell into the highest tier of conservation. This report will be
updated periodically.
Background
CSP in the 2002 Farm Bill. The Conservation Security Program (CSP) is an
agricultural conservation program first created in the 2002 farm bill (P. L. 107-171,
§2001).1 CSP is administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resource
Conservation Service (NRCS). It provides incentives for farmers to pursue conservation
and helps pay for conservation practices. Unlike some other NRCS programs, CSP
1 This report is an updated and revised version of a report originally written by former CRS
analyst Barbara Johnson.
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress
CRS-2
provides payments for conservation on land that remains in production and makes eligible
a wide range of farm lands: cropland, pastureland, rangeland, grassland, prairie land, tribal
lands, and forested lands incidental to an agricultural operation. By statute, CSP
payments to farmers are based on three levels or tiers of participation, with each
successive tier obligating the producer to meet higher standards of environmental
management:
! For Tier I, the producer must have addressed soil quality and water
quality to the described minimum level of treatment for eligible land uses
on part of the agricultural operation prior to acceptance. Contracts for
Tier I last for 5 years and are capped at $20,000 annually.
! For Tier II, the producer must have addressed soil quality and water
quality to the described minimum level of treatment on all eligible land
uses on the entire agricultural operation prior to acceptance and must
agree to address one additional resource by the end of the contract period.
Contracts for Tier II last for 5-10 years and are capped at $35,000
annually.
! For Tier III, the producer must have addressed all applicable resource
concerns to a resource management system level that meets the NRCS
Field Office Technical Guide standards on all eligible land uses on the
entire agricultural operation before acceptance into the program and have
riparian zones adequately treated. Contracts for Tier III last for 5-10
years and are capped at $45,000 annually.
The farm bill places no acreage or funding limits on the CSP, and states that “in entering
into conservation security contracts ... [NRCS] shall not use competitive bidding or any
similar procedure.”2 At the time of enactment, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
estimated that CSP would cost $2.0 billion over ten years. Later projections increased the
cost (see below). CSP is a mandatory program that does not require annual appropriations.
It is funded through the borrowing authority of the Commodity Credit Corporation.3
CSP Appropriations, FY2002-FY2006. During the 2002 farm bill debate, some
raised concerns about the potential costs of CSP and the wisdom of devoting unlimited
funding to a new, unproven program, but pressures to complete action on the farm bill
overcame those concerns. CSP received no funding in FY2002. In 2003, CBO revised
its estimate of CSP costs to $6.8 billion over ten years, and the FY2003 Consolidated
Appropriations Resolution limited spending for CSP to $3.7 billion through FY2013 to
2 P.L. 107-171, §2001. In some NRCS programs, producers bid competitively by indicating their
willingness to accept a lesser payment, increasing their chances that NRCS will accept their bid
for a program contract.
3 The CCC, a wholly owned government corporation, is essentially the financing institution for
the USDA’s farm price and income support programs and, more recently, conservation programs.
It derives its funding through a $30 billion line of credit with the U.S. Treasury, and receives an
annual appropriation of such sums as necessary to cover its operating losses and to repay its debt.
CRS-3
offset the cost of farm disaster assistance.4 The FY2004 Consolidated Appropriations Act
eliminated this 10-year cap but established an FY2004 CSP one-year funding limit of
$41.4 million.5
In March 2004, CBO revised its estimate of CSP costs to $8.9 billion over 10 years
(2005-2014), including an estimated $282 million in spending in FY2005 alone. In
October 2004, Congress limited CSP to $6.037 billion for the 10-year period of 2005 to
2014.6 This allowed appropriators to direct the resulting $2.9 billion in budget savings
to offset the cost of agricultural disaster assistance. The FY2005 Consolidated
Appropriations Act (P.L. 108-447) placed an FY2005 limit on CSP of $202.4 million
(Division A, Title VII, § 741). For FY2006, appropriators limited CSP funding to $259
million. CBO’s January 2006 baseline budget estimates CSP will cost $6.7 billion over
the next ten years (FY2006-FY2015).7 The President’s 2007 budget requested $342.2
million for CSP. The House bill recommends limiting funding to $280 million while the
Senate measure recommends $373 million.
Implementation of CSP. On January 2, 2004, NRCS published a proposed rule
describing how it would prioritize the limited FY2004 funding. It proposed to implement
CSP in certain watersheds on a rotating basis; to require producers to meet strict eligibility
criteria; to sort producers’ applications into enrollment categories; and to reduce certain
CSP payments (69 Federal Register 194). This proved controversial, since the farm bill
included broad eligibility criteria and did not include prioritizing funds. NRCS received
over 20,000 specific comments on the proposed rule. On May 4, NRCS published a notice
stating it would proceed with its proposed approach for the 2004 CSP signup, and detailed
how it would select watersheds (69 Federal Register 24560). On June 21, 2004, NRCS
published an interim final rule (69 Federal Register 34502) finalizing its prioritization
process for the 2004 CSP signup. NRCS accepted comments on the interim final rule
through October 5, 2004, and published an amended interim final rule on March 25, 2005.
A final rule has not been issued and is unlikely to be issued before the 2007 farm bill. An
additional 202 watersheds nationwide were selected for the second CSP enrollment in
2005. For 2006, 60 more watersheds were selected, including ones in the Caribbean and
Guam, bringing the total number of participating watersheds to 280.8
Congressional Hearings. During the 108th Congress, both the Senate and the
House held hearings year on CSP. At a May 11, 2004, hearing by the Senate Agriculture
Committee’s Forestry, Conservation, and Rural Revitalization Subcommittee, NRCS
defended its proposed CSP implementation as a way to achieve environmental benefits
within available funding (citing as program constraints both the FY2004 funding limit and
a statutory provision limiting NRCS’s “technical assistance” to producers to 15% of CSP
4 P.L. 108-7, Division N, Title II, §216.
5 P.L. 108-199, Division A, Title VII, §752.
6 Division B, §101, of the FY2005 Military Construction Appropriations Act (P. L. 108-324).
7 For a discussion of the changing cost estimates of the CSP Conservation Security Program:
Despite Cost Controls, Improved USDA Management Is Needed to Ensure Proper Payments and
Reduce Duplication with Other Programs, GAO-06-312, April 28, 2006.
8 Maps of participating watersheds may be found at [http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/Programs/csp].
CRS-4
annual funds).9 Congressional proponents strongly criticized NRCS’s argument that the
technical assistance limit would pose problems, and stressed that the program is not
capped past FY2004. Witnesses from sustainable agriculture, commodity, livestock, and
farmers’ groups decried NRCS’s plan to limit CSP spending by watersheds, though some
agreed with NRCS that the FY2004 funding limit complicates CSP implementation.
During a June 15, 2004, hearing by the House Agriculture Committee’s Subcommittee
on Conservation, Credit, Rural Development, and Research, the subcommittee chair noted
NRCS’s FY2004 funding predicament, and the subcommittee ranking member noted that
CSP could cost billions of dollars in the future. Farmers’ groups also cited CSP’s
potential as a non-trade distorting payment under the World Trade Organization “green
box” program.
In oversight hearings on farm bill conservation programs in the 109th Congress, the
CSP was noted as a valuable addition to the range of programs supporting natural
resource management.10
Eligibility Criteria for the FY2004-FY2006 Enrollments
The CSP enrollment process is currently guided by the interim final rule issued on
June 21, 2004. A final rule has not been issued. Enrollment requirements include strict
eligibility criteria and prioritize CSP funding by watershed area and by enrollment
categories. NRCS calls this approach “rewarding the best and motivating the rest.”
Producer Eligibility Requirements. The farm bill set fairly general guidelines
for eligibility in the CSP. Producers must share in the risk of production, contribute to
farm operations in a manner commensurate with revenues received, develop an approved
Conservation Security Plan that details conservation activities to be implemented, and
sign a Conservation Security Contract. The interim rule mandates the following further
steps.
Producers Must Inventory Natural Resources. The interim rule (§1469.7(a))
requires producers to complete a self-assessment, including a “Benchmark Condition
Inventory,” prior to applying to CSP. This details the type of agricultural operation, land
uses, existing conservation practices, resource concerns, and the producer’s willingness
to do additional conservation in the future. NRCS uses this to determine the producer’s
eligibility, place the producer in an enrollment category (see below), and determine the
appropriate CSP tier of participation. Producers must submit two years of documentation
to show past stewardship, including fertilizer, pesticide, and nutrient application
schedules, and tilling and grazing schedules.
Producers Must Treat Both Soil and Water. While the farm bill required
producers to treat at least one resource under CSP, the interim final rule requires
producers to treat two resources — soil and water quality — before applying to the
9 “Technical assistance” refers to conservation planning, design, and implementation assistance
that NRCS provides to producers, including assisting producers to enroll in NRCS programs.
10 Senate Committee on Agriculture, Forestry, and Nutrition, Subcommittee on Forestry,
Conservation, and Rural Revitalization, July 26, 2005; Senate Committee on Agriculture,
Forestry, and Nutrition, June 7, 2006.
CRS-5
program.11 Additional eligibility criteria are included in the 2005 and 2006 enrollment
notices.
CSP Applications Prioritized. The June 2004 interim final rule established two
methods of prioritizing applications, neither of which was mentioned in the farm bill
statute. The first includes ranking watersheds nationwide by various criteria and selecting
certain of those watersheds to be eligible for CSP. The second involves placing
applications into various “enrollment categories” based on the applicant’s current
conservation efforts and willingness to do additional conservation. These criteria are also
used in the FY2005 and FY2006 enrollments.
Criteria for Selecting Eligible Watersheds. For the 2004 signup, NRCS
ranked over 2,000 watersheds nationwide. Through National Resources Inventory data,
NRCS ranked watersheds based on concentrations of eligible land uses; intensity of
pesticide, fertilizer, and manure use; and prevalence of historic and recent conservation
efforts. Once watersheds were ranked, NRCS prioritized them further by selecting those
it considered to be “improving” according to these criteria. NRCS estimated in 2004 that
by 2012 CSP could rotate through all 2,264 watersheds. Should spending caps continue
in subsequent years, the objective may be more difficult to attain.
NRCS Places Applications in Enrollment Categories. For the FY2006
enrollment, there are five categories (A-E) and five groups (1-5) within each tier. Acreage
is enrolled based on the ranking of grazing and cropping systems on various soil, water,
and wildlife habitat quality indicators and performance/management levels. Categories
are funded nationally in priority order (beginning with category “A”) until funding is
exhausted. The FY2006 notice also specifies that if subcategories cannot be fully funded,
applicants will be offered the FY2006 CSP contract payment on a prorated basis.12
CSP Contract Payments. The CSP contract payment is by statute composed of
three components: stewardship payments (Tier I),13 payments for new and existing
practices (Tier II), and payments for enhancement activities that go beyond minimum
contract requirements (Tier III). Annual payments average $11,000, and range from $500
to $45,000.
Stewardship Payment. This is a payment tied to the number of acres enrolled
in CSP. The stewardship component is calculated separately for each land use by
multiplying the number of acres times the tier factor (5%-15%) times the stewardship
payment rate established for the watershed (based on land rental rates) times the tier
11 According to the NRCS, determining soil quality involves evaluating the amount of organic
matter in the soil, its fitness as a seedbed, and other factors. Assessing water quality involves
evaluating the level of pesticides, nutrients, turbidity or other contaminants in water.
12 The Federal Register announcement for the FY2006 enrollment provides detailed information
on the criteria of different enrollment categories. See 71 Federal Register 6250-6263, February
7, 2006.
13 These are called “base payments” in the farm bill, but NRCS has renamed them “stewardship
payments” in response to comments that the term “base”could lead to confusion with “base
acres” used in farm programs.
CRS-6
reduction factor (25%-75%). This reduction factor was not authorized in the original
legislation and reduces this part of the CSP payment.
Payments for New and Existing Practices. The farm bill restricts payments
for new and existing practices to not more than 75% of the practice cost (this rises to 90%
for beginning farmers and ranchers). For FY2006 contracts, existing practice payments
are calculated as a flat rate of 25% of the stewardship payment, and new practice
payments will be made at not more than 50% cost-share rate. For FY2006, all new
practice payments are limited to a $10,000 cumulative total for the contract.
Enhancement Payments. The farm bill lists five activities a participant can
carry out that qualify for enhancement payments, including implementing multiple
conservation practices; addressing local conservation priorities; participating in on-farm
research; participating in a watershed or regional conservation plan; and assessing and
evaluating conservation activities. The interim final rule specified only two types of
enhancement components as “available” in the FY2004 sign-up. For FY2006, the
enhancement payment is calculated at a variable payment rate for activities that are part
of the benchmark inventory. The total of all enhancement payments in any one year
ranges from $13,750 to $21,875, depending on the tier.
Issues for Congress
One issue for Congress may concern whether NRCS’s implementation of CSP is
consistent with congressional intentions. On one hand, congressional authorizers crafted
CSP as an entitlement program with unlimited funding; on the other, congressional
appropriators have since limited that funding. Authorizers specified broad eligibility
criteria in the farm bill, but due to funding limits NRCS created strict procedures that
applicants must follow in order to qualify. NRCS argues that because the farm bill placed
a statutory 15% limit on CSP technical assistance, CSP implementation will be
constrained. Congressional CSP proponents have disputed this. NRCS intends to offer
the CSP each year, on a rotational basis, in as many watersheds as possible. Several new
activities (e.g., the energy component of CSP) may create further demand for the program
in an environment of significant budget deficits.
Another issue for Congress may be CSP’s potential status as a “green box” program
under the World Trade Organization (WTO) structure. In WTO parlance, “green box”
programs (which pay producers for environmental services) are not subject to reductions
under the WTO. CSP spending appears likely to be classified as a “green box” program.
In light of possible reductions in direct agricultural subsidies in the current Doha Round
of WTO deliberations, some view “green box” programs like CSP as the type of farm
support most likely to survive future international negotiations (particularly in light of the
June 19, 2005, WTO decision, which ruled that U.S. cotton support payments are unfair
to Brazilian cotton producers and artificially lower the world price of cotton). Some
witnesses for the House Agriculture subcommittee hearings have noted CSP’s “green
box” potential as a possible advantage to the program. However, there is currently little
overlap between producers receiving relatively large direct commodity payments and
conservation-program payments.