The program received heavy interest among northern Idaho wheat growers during the initial signup period last fall, and IAMP officials will emphasize enrolling southern and eastern Idaho projects involving potatoes and sugar beets during this round of applications. IAMP prioritizes acreage enrollments to maximize producer, practice, regional and commodity diversity.
The first large-scale enrollment of producers implementing climate-smart practices will commence this spring. Producers who registered during the initial signup round needn’t take any action during the current round.
“I’m optimistic we can make a big impact on changing agriculture in Idaho,” said Erin Brooks, IAMP co-director and professor in the Department of Soil and Water Systems. “I see a potential transformation that could happen over the next five years, and IAMP could be the key catalyst.”
The application form will invite producers to identify their preferences among a list of IAMP partner organizations to advise and guide them throughout the program, including county soil conservation districts, The Nature Conservancy, Desert Mountain Grass-Fed Beef and the Nimiipuu (Nez Perce) and Schitsu’umsh (Coeur d’Alene) tribes.
IAMP will enroll more than 200 farms, with at least 30% of participants representing underserved populations. The program aims to prevent 31,000 to 70,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalents from entering the atmosphere annually while replenishing cropland soil carbon.
Throughout last summer, a team of graduate students and postdoctoral researchers from U of I took greenhouse gas measurements and sampled soil carbon from plots with IAMP-approved practices at university research and extension centers. The data will help guide program estimates on climate and soil benefits.
Source : uidaho.edu