| Agriculture Secretary Vilsack Announces Conservation Innovation Grants |
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| Written by Farm Compliance | |
| Monday, 13 July 2009 | |
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Dearborn, Michigan - 2009-Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack today announced $18.4 million in Conservation Innovation Grants to fund 55 projects to develop and refine cutting-edge technologies and approaches to help farmers and ranchers conserve and sustain natural resources. Vilsack made the announcement in a speech at the Soil and Water Conservation Society annual meeting in Dearborn, Mich.
"New technology can play an important role in addressing environmental problems, and the Obama Administration is committed to developing innovative solutions to natural resource management and conservation issues facing farmers and ranchers," Vilsack said. "These Conservation Innovation Grants will benefit both agriculture and the environment by getting 21st century ideas in the hands of our producers across the country."
The Conservation Innovation Grant program is designed to speed the transfer and enhance use of technologies and methods that show promise in solving the nation's top natural resource problems by targeting innovative, on-the-ground conservation. Approved projects address issues such as water quantity and quality, grazing lands, soil and forest health, and air quality.
"The Conservation Innovation Grant program enables USDA to review, field test, and demonstrate practices and ideas that have yet to be successfully mainstreamed into our portfolio of practice options," said Dave White, Chief of the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), which administers the program and provides technical oversight for each project.
Some recent examples of completed Conservation Innovation Grant (CIG) projects include:
Grantees provide matching funds, bringing the total value of the approved projects to more than $36.8 million. The program targets grants to state and local governments, Indian tribes, non-governmental organizations and individuals. As part of its continuing outreach efforts to minority and underserved communities, USDA will fund six proposals valued at $1 million to help Native American tribes and limited resource producers address natural resource issues, energy efficiency, and market-based approaches to conservation. Additional information about CIG, including summaries of approved projects, is available at www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/cig. A listing of all fiscal year 2009 CIG projects can be found at www.nrcs.usda.gov. For more information about USDA's conservation programs, visit www.nrcs.usda.gov or the nearest USDA Service Center in your area. |
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