USDA reports strong interest for Climate-Smart Commodities funds

May 12, 2022

BY Erin Voegele

The USDA on May 10 announced it received more than 450 proposals for large-scale projects under its new Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities program. The agency is accepting proposals for smaller-scale projects through June 10.

The USDA first announced plans for the initiative in September 2021. The newly launched program will finance pilot projects that create market opportunities for U.S. agricultural and forestry products that use climate-smart practices and include innovative, cost-effective ways to measure and verify greenhouse gas benefits. 

Advertisement

The agency in February opened a $1 billion funding opportunity for the Climate-Smart Commodities program. Funding for the program is being provided through the USDA’s Commodity Credit Corp. to support and provide incentives to pilot project producers and landowners to implement climate-smart production practices, activities and systems on working lands; measure/quantify, monitor and verify the carbon and GHG benefits associated with those practices; and develop markets and promote the resulting climate-smart commodities.

The funding opportunity is divided into two pools. The first is for larger-scale proposals from $5 million to $100 million, with an initial application deadline set for April 8. The second funding pool is for smaller-scale projects ranging from $250,000 to $4.99 million. The deadline for the second pool was originally set for May 27. The agency extended those deadlines in March.  The deadline for the first pool was extended to May 6, while deadline for the second pool is now set for June 10.

The USDA issued a statement on May 10 announcing that more than 450 proposals were submitted by more than 350 groups as part of the first application pool. The agency said it will evaluate those applications over the next few months. Awards for the first round of funding are expected to be awarded later this summer.

Advertisement

The USDA is also encouraging interested parties to submit proposals for smaller-scale projects under the second funding pool. Additional information is available on the USDA website

 

 

Related Stories

A group of 16 senators, led by Sens. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., on April 8 sent a letter to U.S. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin urging the agency to increase RVO and account for SREs in the agency’s upcoming RFS rulemaking.

Read More

Tidewater Renewables Ltd. has reported that its biorefinery in Prince George, British Columbia, operated at 88% capacity last year. A final investment decision on the company’s proposed SAF project is expected by year end.

Read More

A group of small refineries on April 4 sent a letter to President Donald Trump urging him “to sent the multi-national oil and biofuels companies back to the drawing board to come up with a biofuels policy that does no harm.”

Read More

BDI-BioEnergy International has signed a contract with Ghent Renewables BV to begin the construction of a pioneering biofuel feedstock refinery plant. Construction is underway and the facility is expected to be operational by the end of 2025.

Read More

Verity Holdings LLC, a subsidiary of Gevo Inc., has partnered with Minnesota Soybean Processors (MnSP) to implement Verity’s proprietary track and trace software. The collaboration aims to unlock additional value through export premiums.

Read More

Upcoming Events

Sign up for our e-newsletter!

Advertisement

Advertisement