With challenges related to the pandemic, supply chains, and the war in Ukraine, farmers are doing their part to feed the world. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) is making that easier by simplifying the crop insurance application process and expanding double cropping coverage, enabling producers to insure two crops on the same land each year, such as soybeans following the harvest of crops like winter wheat. This is the result of active stakeholder engagement and part of a broader effort by USDA to address global food insecurity and to boost domestic production.
To increase awareness of double cropping, USDA’s Risk Management Agency (RMA) reminds producers that for the 2023 crop year there may be insurance options for double crop soybeans as well as grain sorghum and other crops in counties where the Following Another Crop (FAC) practice is not available.
“It's important that producers know they have insurance options for double cropping, even in counties where coverage was only previously available via written agreement,” said Collin Olsen, RMA’s Topeka Regional Office Director. “If you’re looking at relay cropping or double cropping in counties without coverage, please contact your crop insurance agent for details on requesting a written agreement to provide coverage.”
As part of increasing the number of counties where insurance for double cropping is available, RMA held 100-plus meetings and engagements with a broad range of farm organizations and the crop insurance industry in the past few months.
For the 2023 crop year, farmers in select counties in Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska may now be eligible to request a written agreement through their crop insurance company to insure their FAC cropping practice. Producers requesting FAC coverage for the first time, have until the acreage reporting date of July 15 to submit a request to their agent. Contact your agent for additional details and applicable deadlines.
Information regarding the details of the expansion of these options, including maps, can be found as they become available at the Topeka Regional Office webpage.
RMA has also published frequently asked questions specifically related to the expansion effort and more generally about double cropping.
Source : usda.gov