A new Farm Journal poll conducted on behalf of Invest in Our Land in 10 agricultural states shows U.S. farmers and ranchers believe conservation funding has an important role to play in building their operations’ resilience to increasingly extreme weather and addressing the effects of climate change.
The poll — which surveyed 1,019 farmers, ranchers and producers across Pennsylvania, Arkansas, Georgia, Minnesota, Iowa, Colorado, South Dakota, Michigan, Montana and Wisconsin — also revealed that, by a double-digit margin, farmers and ranchers want Congress to protect $20 billion in conservation funding originally authorized by the Inflation Reduction Act and ensure those funds remain dedicated to climate-smart practices in the upcoming farm bill.
Commissioned by Invest in Our Land and conducted by Farm Journal’s Trust In Food initiative, the survey shows:
- 85% of respondents said that conservation funding plays an important role in helping farmers and ranchers adapt in the face of increasingly extreme weather. Similarly, two-thirds (67%) said that conservation funding plays an important role in protecting the planet from the effects of changing climate.
- 66% of respondents said they agree that conservation programs “help farmers implement practices and make on-farm upgrades that can increase operational resilience in the event of extreme weather events (such as droughts, floods, etc.).”
- 60% of respondents indicated that they support the Inflation Reduction Act’s $20 billion investment in agricultural conservation programs. By contrast, only 18% oppose this investment.
- 41% of respondents said they would oppose congressional efforts to remove the requirement that the $20 billion in Inflation Reduction Act conservation funding be directed only toward conservation practices that have proven to be more effective in reducing carbon emissions (the so-called “climate guardrails”), while only 28% said they would support such an action — representing a 13-point margin in favor of keeping the dollars dedicated to climate-smart conservation. (24% of respondents had no opinion.)
Toplines of the survey are available online.
“The data is clear: America’s farmers and ranchers know firsthand that climate-smart conservation funding is a crucial tool in helping their farms weather these storms, along with other impacts of a changing climate,” said Joe Hack, spokesperson for Invest in Our Land. “As Congress continues to work on these issues in the weeks ahead, we encourage them to continue to listen to the voices of our hard-working farmers and protect climate-smart conservation in the farm bill.”
Farmers and ranchers across the country face serious challenges, from plummeting profits to skyrocketing costs to increasingly extreme weather. According to the American Farm Bureau Federation, major disasters and extreme weather events — such as drought, floods, and wildfires — caused more than $21 billion in crop losses for U.S. farmers and ranchers in 2023 alone.
In 2022, Congress invested in the Inflation Reduction Act to help U.S. farmers and ranchers adopt conservation practices that boost their businesses and strengthen their farms for the long haul.
Farm bill reauthorization is underway now, which could affect these programs. The House Committee on Agriculture recently reported out a bill that diverts funds away from climate-smart conservation practices.
“Time and again, we see U.S. farmers and ranchers stepping up to be good stewards of our nation’s land, air and water. What this data tells us is that they consider the farm bill’s conservation programs to be an important tool in helping them meet these goals,” said Amy Skoczlas Cole, president of Trust In Food at Farm Journal. “While the private sector is increasingly involved in climate-smart agriculture, our experience is that the USDA conservation programs play a steadying and reliable role in helping farmers manage a changing market environment.”


