Results of the 2023 General and Grassland CRP sign-ups have been released. A total of 3.11 million acres were accepted into Grassland CRP (USDA, FSA, April 17, 2023). For General CRP, offers of 0.30 million new acres and 0.89 million expiring contract acres were accepted (USDA, FSA, June 12, 2023). An owner can decide not to enroll accepted acres. Acres can be enrolled in Continuous CRP at any time. Acres under contracts expiring on September 30, 2023 total 1.5 million in General CRP and 0.47 million in Continuous CRP (USDA, FSA, July 2023). If we assume (1) May 31, 2023 CRP acres as the starting point, (2) all accepted acres will enroll in CRP by September 30, 2023, and (3) all expiring Continuous CRP acres will reenroll; Grassland CRP will have the most acres at 9.2 million by October 31, 2023 (see Figure 2). General and Continuous CRP will each have 8.2 million acres. For the first time, General CRP will likely not be the largest CRP program.

Discussion
CRP has evolved into a program distant from its original design. Its historic objective to remove whole fields from production will be surpassed by Grassland CRP as the largest CRP program in 2023. Moreover, Continuous CRP will be as large as General CRP.
The on-going shift in CRP acres, profitability of crop production since 2006, and improvements in GPS combine to prompt a fundamental policy design question: “Should General and Continuous CRP be folded into a Site Specific CRP?” Whole field removal would occur only if its benefit-cost ratio exceeds that of site specific environmentally beneficial practices with the rest of the field in crop production. This proposal builds upon the idea of Precision Conservation (see Swinton, 2022).
The increasing role of grasslands in CRP, research that suggests sequestration of carbon by pastures can be increased (Conant, et al., 2017; and Paustian, et al., 2019), and the 400 million plus acres of non-forested grazing land in the US (USDA, NASS, April 2019) also combine to prompt a fundamental policy design question: “Should a Carbon Capture CRP program be created with Grassland CRP as a component?” Proposals also exist to focus a Carbon Capture CRP on forest land (see, for example, Lichtenberg, July 5, 2023). According to the 2017 Census of Agriculture, there are 73 million acres of woodlots on farms. USDA, FSA currently supports a research project to better quantify carbon capture by perennial grasses, trees, and wetlands (USDA, FSA, October 12, 2021).
A Carbon Capture CRP initially focused on grasslands may offer more potential to capture carbon than the much debated, currently unproven carbon markets for the 318 million acres of principal crops in the US.
Source : illinois.edu