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7. What Is The Nature Of Resource Policy In The U.S. Today?

7. What Is The Nature Of Resource Policy In The U.S. Today?. Larry D. Sanders Fall 2005. Dept. of Ag Economics Oklahoma State University. Introduction. Purpose: to understand resource policy issues & options Learning Objectives:

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7. What Is The Nature Of Resource Policy In The U.S. Today?

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  1. 7. What Is The Nature Of Resource Policy In The U.S. Today? Larry D. Sanders Fall 2005 Dept. of Ag Economics Oklahoma State University

  2. Introduction • Purpose: • to understand resource policy issues & options • Learning Objectives: 1. Become aware of the origin, types & values of resource policy issues. 2. Understand major resource issues, options & who pays. 3. Understand farmland retention & preservation issues. 4. Understand resource provisions in farm bill & other key legislation (this lesson and NRCS presentation on class website).

  3. Sources Of Resource Policy Issues • SCARCITY • If not reflected in price, use will go up • Technology & Price dependent • VALUE QUESTIONS • Availability, Access, Alternate Uses, Political Will • PROPERTY RIGHTS • Socially Determined, Legally Supported, Not Absolute, Externalities Matter

  4. Sources Of Resource Policy Issues (continued) • PUBLIC GOODS • Free Riders & Nondivisibility prevent privatization • FREE MARKET-POPULIST MOVEMENT • Shifting Political Support to Privatize & Localize

  5. Resource Types • NONRENEWABLE • Stock resource for relevant time frame • Use leads to depletion • RENEWABLE • Flow resource; can be replenished within relevant time frame • Use does not lead to depletion • Sustainability may be an issue (rate of usage may matter) • Quality must be maintained

  6. Value Questions • Private vs. Social values • Current vs. Future generations • Market value vs. NONMARKET value • (Use + option + existence) • Property value • Travel cost • Contingent values--ownership an issue • Willingness to pay • Willingness to sell

  7. Key Question: Who Pays? • Free market • Government subsidies • Incentives to alter behavior (WTS) • Taxes • Internalize cost of externalities (WTP) • Regulations • May mandate or prohibit actions • Current vs. Future generations

  8. Issues & Options: Soil Conservation • Free Market--Soil Erosion Up, Water Quality Down, Productivity Down, Externalities Up • Federal legislation • Ag Conservation Payments (ACP)--1930s • Technical Assistance--1935 • Soil Bank--1950s • Conservation Compliance & Sodbuster—1985 • Conservation Reserve Program--1985 • Easements--1990 • Regulation--”Takings” Issue--1990s • 1996 FAIR Act (CRP; EQIP; CFO) • FSRIA 2002 (expands existing programs; adds CSP, GRP) • Green Payments--2007?

  9. Issues & Options:Water Use • SUPPLY • Development (Dams, Diversions, etc.) • increased availability & ag production & lower food prices • reduced endangered species & scenic areas • Pricing or Sale of Rights--typically a state/local issue • increased water costs & conservation • may reduce ag production • water is more likely available • Management--typically a state issue • increased water conservation & reduced scarcity • use more consistent with need • reduced freedom & value of water rights

  10. Issues & Options:Water Use • SURFACE WATER RIGHTS • Riparian (owner of land) • Prior Appropriation • GROUNDWATER RIGHTS • Absolute ownership • Reasonable use • Restatement rule • Correlative rights

  11. Issues & Options:Water Quality • Free Market--Point & Nonpoint Pollution • Input taxes--Internalize costs • Subsidies • --Incentives (WQIP; CRP; EQIP; CFO; WRP; Cost-sharing; Green payments; IPM) • “Point” source regulations/fines • Water quality, production costs, food prices up • Soil erosion, farmer freedom down

  12. Issues & Options:Water Quality (continued) • REGULATION • Key regulations: • Clean Water Act (CWA)-1977 • Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA)-1972 • Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA)-1974 • Federal Insecticide Fungicide & Rodenticide Act (FIFRA)-47; Federal Environmental Pesticide Control Act (FEPCA)-72; 88; 96 • Endangered Species Act (ESA)-1973 • Food Quality Protection Act (FQPA)-1996 • Performance Standards (flexibility) • Prescribing/Proscribing Practices • Court cases—OK-AR example

  13. Issues & Options:Wetlands • Definitional issue • Free market • Reduced wetlands, water quality, wildlife, habitat • More land for ag, residential & commercial use • Regulation • Swampbuster • No net loss • BMPs • Subsidies • WRP--1990 • Compensation • Hurricane Katrina brings renewed attention to value of coastal wetlands as barriers to natural disasters

  14. Issues & Options:Endangered Species • Free market • Increased threat to more species • Reduced biodiversity • Low production costs & food prices • Regulation • “Taking” prohibited (ESA--1973) • Cost/benefit analysis • Sep 05:House passed: Threatened and Endangered Species Recovery Act (TESRA) of 2005 • Calls for compensation rule • Subsidies • Compensation

  15. Issues & Options:Farmland Protection Every single minute of every day, America loses two acres of farmland. We lost farm and ranch land 51 percent faster in the 90s than in the 80s. We're losing our best land-most fertile and productive-the fastest. Our food is increasingly in the path of development. Wasteful land use is the problem, not growth itself. Every state is losing some of its best farmland. [OK losing 12,660 ac/yr…] --American Farmland Trust, October 2002.

  16. Issues & Options:Farmland Protection • Retention--continues active use • Preservation--prevents nonagricultural use • Goals--typically state/local issue • Maintain food/fiber productive capacity • Maintain healthy local agricultural community • Maintain open space amenities • Maintain efficient development policy (rural-urban interface?)

  17. Issues & Options:Farmland Protection • Free market vs. Regulation • Zoning laws • Development rights market • Right-to-farm laws • Preferential assessment • Ag districts • Subsidies • 1996 FAIR act ($17.2 mil. for easements in 1998) • FSRIA continues • State initiatives (OK Land Trust)

  18. Issues & Options:Global Climate Change • Key issues: • Time perspective? • Sources? • Geography (trans-national?) • Irreversibility? • Science? • Free market • Research & extension • Regulation—very little domestic rules • Global: • 1997 Kyoto accords • 1999 Bonn conference • US support unlikely soon • 2002 Earth Summit—Africa • Subsidies

  19. Issues & Options:Biotechnology • Precision or Prescription Agriculture: the “Great Green Hope” or “Frankenfoods”? • Robotics, GPS, Microsensors, By-plant Prescription Production • May minimize environmental concerns • Who can afford it? • Transportation issues • Reduced production flexibility/property rights • Great hope for reducing world hunger

  20. Issues & Options:Biotechnology • Bio-engineered Seed/GMOs/GEOs • genetically altered attributes (Bt crops: “bacillus thuringiensis”) • Concerns: • unintended direct ecosystem impacts • unintended mutation impacts • unintended human impacts when eaten • labeling to give consumer choice • “Microsofting” of agricultural input marketing

  21. Property Rights Part of Public Policy Debate • Institutional Factors • Property (assumes rights to possession & use of economic objects w/govt. rules for ownership, transfer, use, etc.) • Private vs. Common Property • Limited rights (land, water, minerals, air space, time share, etc.)

  22. Additional Policy Notes (cont.) • Institutional Factors (cont.) • Development (zoning, building, flood control, homestead, permit markets, taxes, court injunctions, eminent domain, etc.) • Property rights for Land--Fee Simple Ownership • Rights of Owner to: Possess/use, Sell, Devise (pass to heirs), Lease, Mortgage, Subdivide, Grant Easements • Rights of Govt. to: Tax, Take for public use (eminent domain), Control use of (police power), Escheat (reversion to state at death) • June 05: US Supreme Court Kelo Case • Re-affirmed eminent domain to cover takings for community economic development

  23. Additional Policy Notes (cont.) • Institutional Factors (cont.) • Rights are exclusive, not absolute • Rights evolve in court cases & law • Rights carry legal & ethical responsibilities

  24. Cross-cutting Concepts for Environmental Policy 1. Control of commercial agriculture in US 2. Impact on risk & risk management 3. Production alternatives 4. Political & economic trade-offs • Treating problems or symptoms • War on Terrorism & War on Iraq will complicate options. • Common ground for environmentalists and ag producers/landowners (sustainability) • Food security/safety • Energy needs versus Environmental protection

  25. Summary • Natural resource policy continues to evolve, with recent backlash of individual vs. society • Current policy issues focus on: • Wars on terrorism & Iraq • deficit reduction • guarding property rights & keeping producer costs down to maintain competitiveness • questioning environmental protection

  26. Summary (continued) • Environmental battles likely to return to local level, with reduction in overall environmental quality & increased confusion over rules • More focus on agriculture for energy, environmental amenity use, and working farmlands

  27. CRP—Active Contracts, Aug 2005, US & OK Annual Rental Payments

  28. CRP 1986-2000 • CRP Rental Rates ranged from $37-$43/ac. for OK during 1986-1995 • CRP Rental Rates ranged from $28-$34/ac for Ok during 1996-2000 • OK (OSU-NRCS) 1995 study suggests CRP more profitable than returning to production for CRP land terminating existing contracts: • Participate in new CRP: $25 net income • Return to wheat/sorghum: ($16)-($32) net loss • Keep in grass for grazing: $17-$24 net income

  29. Location of CRP Enrollment, October 2000

  30. Oklahoma CRP Update, Apr 02 (Prepared by R. Wanger, OK FSA) Cimarron 158,615.6 Texas 218,206.4 Beaver 134,586.3 Woods 24,753 Ottawa 324.7 Harper 64,364.4 Alfalfa 9,662 Grant 17,086.6 Kay 3,547.4 Osage 1,126.4 Craig 484.8 Nowata 179.7 Washington Noble 1,316 Delaware 49 Woodward 23,034.5 Rogers 0 Garfield 5,171.3 Major 16,027.8 Mayes 0 Pawnee Ellis 63,415.9 \Payne 291.3 Tulsa 118.7 Dewey 19,243 2,313.4 Logan Kingfisher 4,706.6 Wagoner 102.8 Adair 0 Creek 0 Blaine 6,928.8 Cherokee 0 Lincoln 581.3 Roger Mills 24,024.1 Okmulgee 572.9 Custer 5,505.3 Muskogee 553.1 Oklahoma 0 Canadian 2,157 Okfuskee 385.9 Sequoyah 0 Beckham 49,030.2 Washita 4,636 McIntosh 0 Cleveland 0 Haskell 457.3 Caddo 7,498.2 Grady 2,262.7 Seminole230.2 Pottawatomie 587.7 Greer 34,902.2 McClain 77.8 Hughes 173.9 Kiowa 4,968.2 Pittsburg 22 Latimer 0 Garvin 46 Pontotoc 63.6 LeFlore 0 Comanche 894.8 Jackson 21,399.1 Coal 73 Harmon 51,665.3 CRP Acreage as of April 30, 2002 1,024,842.3 59 Counties Average Rental Rate - $32.45 Total Contracts - 8568 Stephens 1,498.9 Murray Tillman 13,843.5 Cotton 5,619.1 Pushmataha 0 Johnston 0 Atoka 0 Carter 250 Jefferson 9,812.3 McCurtain 1,065.3 Bryan 3,320.8 Choctaw 0 Love 712.9 Marshall 295.3

  31. Farm Bill Update: FSRIA 02--Conservation Programs • Quadruples EQIP • Conservation Security Program (Harkin) $2 billion total • Fy05: • US: 14,516 applications; 10.1 mil. Ac. • OK: 234 apps; 105,820 ac. • Adds 4 bil acres to CRP, WRP

  32. An Evolving Conservation Philosophy • Previous programs focused on protecting environment/natural resources & compensating producers/landowners • New philosophy is shifting toward working farmland with a conservation ethic (increase from current 7% to new 40% of program costs) • Farmers and ranchers should manage farmland to provide cheap, high quality food and fiber and environmental amenities (e.g. clean air and water, wildlife habitat, open space, sequestered carbon).

  33. Conservation Programs TOTAL $17.1 billion for 2002-2007 • CRP– 39.2 (36.4) million acre cap- $1.517 billion • *Conservation Security Program - $2 billion • Environmental Quality Incentives Program- $9 billion • Wetland Reserve Program – 2.6 (1.1) million acre cap - $1.726 billion • *Grassland Reserve Program – 2 million acres – $254 million • Farmland Protection Program - $1 billion • Wildlife Habitat Incentive Program - $700 million • Small Watershed Rehabilitation Program - $275 million

  34. Conservation Programs - Summary • CRP/WRP– if you can’t manage land to meet environmental restrictions • EQIP – if you need technical or financial assistance to manage land • Other Programs to preserve desired landscape • CSP – if you want to try new management • FPP – protect against urban sprawl • GRP – protect fragile grasslands • WHIP – maintain or improve wildlife habitat

  35. Energy Title—(Title IX, FSRIA02) 1.Federal Procurement of biobased products 2.Biorefinery development grants 3.Biodiesel fuel education programs 4.Energy audit and renewable energy development program 5.Renewable energy systems and energy efficiency improvements 6.Hydrogen and fuel cell technologies 7.Biomass research and development 8.Cooperative research and extension projects 9.Continuation of bioenergy program

  36. Energy Title • Key provisions • Federal agencies required to procure biobased products. • Biobased “products will be purchased to the maximum extent possible.” • Energy from bio-mass including ag crops and animals waste. • Energy from renewable sources, wind, solar, biomass or geothermal or hydrogen produced from water or biomass

  37. Bio-Based Preference • Key Points • Each federal agency required to have specs for bio-based products within one year. • Optional, allows some wiggle room to opt out. • Labeling for bio-based products. • Office of Federal Procurement Policy coordinated program. • Preference in contracting goes to item with highest % bio-based product. • $6 million

  38. BIO Refinery Grants • Key Points: • Grants to defray cost of development and construction of bio-refineries. • Farmers, national lab, institutions of higher ed, state or local agency, tribe, consortium. • Gov’t cost not to exceed 30% of cost.

  39. Bio-Diesel Fuel Education Program • Key Points • Grant to educate public and government about the benefits of bio diesel. • $1 million/year.

  40. CCC Bio-Energy Program • Payments to eligible producers to encourage increased purchase of eligible commodities for purpose of expanding production of bio-energy and supporting new production capacity for bioenergy. • Contract required • Producers < 65K gallons reimbursed 1 feedstock unit for every 2.5 feedstock units of commodity used for increased production • Producers 65K or more gallons 1 feedstock unit for every 3.5 feedstock units. • No farmer gets more than 5% of total funds • Proration allowed • Total authorized $150M/yr. 2003-06; $0 in 2007

  41. Other Energy Provisions • Energy Audit and Renewable Energy Audits Grant • Cost share gov’t pays 75%. • Renewable Energy Purchase Grants • Loan and Loan guarantees for farmers to purchase renewable energy systems or to make energy efficiency improvements. • Grant not to exceed 25% of cost. • Grant and Loan not to exceed 50% of cost of system. • Must be cost effective. • $75 million

  42. Other Energy Provisions • Hydrogen Cells and Fuel Cells • Sec. Ag. to work with Sec. Energy to disseminate info. • Biomass Research and Development • Reauthorizes the Biomass Research & Development Act of 2000 • CCC gives $5M 2002; $14M 2003-2007; • Additional authorized $49M 2002-2007. • CSREES Carbon Sequestration Research & Extension • Such sums as are necessary are authorized .

  43. Energy Policy in FSRIA02--2005 update • Biomass Research & Development • Oct 05: 11 research, development & demo projects selected to receive $12.6 mil. • Cost share brings total to $19 mil. • Joint effort USDA & DOE • Noble Foundation, Ardmore: $670,166

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