
Last summer, the department spent nearly $20 billion on conservation programs that encourage climate-friendly farming. That includes planting cover crops like beans and peas, which help soils absorb carbon year-round. And tilling less farmland to keep more carbon stored in soils rather than being released into the atmosphere.
Now, the department plans to spend $300 million more on national research networks. One network will measure the effectiveness of climate-friendly practices; another will monitor levels of greenhouse gas emissions released through crop and livestock production. That data will be collected over the next decade.
Anne Schechinger of the Environmental Working Group, a nonpartisan research and advocacy organization, said the move is a “step in the right direction, but many years late.”