再生农业终于在 USDA 获得了一席之地。
Regenerative Agriculture Finally Has A Seat At The Table At USDA

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/regenerative-agriculture-finally-has-seat-table-usda

美国农业部最近宣布了一项7亿美元的试点计划,以支持再生农业。尽管过去对联邦农业支持存在怀疑,但这一举措被倡导者誉为向前迈出的重要一步。该计划由卫生部长罗伯特·F·肯尼迪和农业部长布鲁克·罗林斯倡导,旨在激励农民采用改善土壤健康、环境适应力和食品质量的措施。 与以往的保护工作不同,该试点明确使用了“再生农业”一词,简化了申请流程,支持长期转型,并且至关重要的是,将资金与可衡量的成果联系起来,例如改善的土壤健康、水质和养分密度。 该倡议是美国再生组织等团体持续倡导的结果,他们与政策制定者沟通,强调将财政支持与实际结果联系起来的必要性。再生农业实践的先驱,如里克·克拉克和布莱克·亚历山大等农民,出席了发布会,标志着重视实地经验和农民主导解决方案的转变。 7亿美元的资金只是一个适度的开始,但该计划的成功可能会带来资金的扩大以及美国农业部支持农业方式的根本性改变——奖励农民取得的成果,而不仅仅是合规。

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原文

Authored by Ryland Engelhart via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Commentary

Something unusual and long overdue recently took place at the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).

U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is joined by U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins and California farmer Blake Alexander (L) during the announcement of a $700 million pilot program to support regenerative agriculture at the Department of Agriculture in Washington on Dec. 10, 2025. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Two regenerative agriculture pioneers, Rick Clark of Indiana and Blake Alexander of California, stood alongside Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins as the department announced a new $700 million investment in regenerative agriculture.

Given recent history, skepticism is understandable. Cuts to farm-to-school lunch programs, the rollback of farmer grants funded under the Inflation Reduction Act, and a longstanding lack of consistent support for small and mid-sized family farms have left many producers wary of federal promises. I understand the doubt. Many farmers have learned, the hard way, to expect little.

Still, this moment matters.

As someone who followed RFK Jr. to the White House, I have remained clear-eyed about the limits of his authority at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Agriculture policy does not sit within HHS, and his portfolio is already full. Yet Kennedy has long understood the opportunity that regenerative agriculture presents, not just for farmers but also for public health, environmental resilience, and food quality.

That understanding helped inspire Kelly Ryerson, Rick Clark, and me to co-found American Regeneration, an organization created to educate, inform, and influence this administration, particularly within the MAHA ecosystem, on why soil health must be part of the national agenda.

Over the past year, our team and advisers made eight trips to Washington, meeting with policymakers, submitting memos, and engaging in sustained dialogue. Across those conversations, one conclusion became unavoidable. If policymakers want conventional producers to transition toward regenerative practices, they must fund the transition and tie that funding to measurable outcomes.

For me, seeing this announcement felt like a long-held vision beginning to take shape.

I was traveling home from the 50th anniversary of the Acres Conference in Madison, Wisconsin, where my sister, Mollie Engelhart, shared the main stage with regenerative leaders such as Will Harris and Joel Salatin. We screened an educational cut of Common Ground for more than 600 farmers and hosted a Q&A with regenerative pioneers Gabe Brown and Rick Clark. From there, I headed south to the Mycelia food systems conference in Sebastian, Florida.

During an Uber ride, I received a message from Calley Means, a White House adviser to Secretary Kennedy and a leader within the MAHA movement. “Check your email,” she wrote.

Inside was a preview of a regenerative agriculture framework scheduled for release in the coming weeks.

Over the last year, Means and I have exchanged ideas on how USDA and HHS could work together to encourage soil-health adoption among conventional growers. Those discussions, across meetings, memos, and policy proposals, kept circling back to a principle long championed by Gabe Brown. Incentives only work when they reward real results.

That principle is embedded in this new USDA pilot, and it marks a clear departure from past conservation programs.

Among its distinguishing features:

  • It explicitly uses the term “Regenerative Agriculture.”
  • It relies on a single, streamlined application rather than fragmented enrollment.
  • It allows bundled conservation practices under a whole-farm plan.
  • It supports multi-year transitions, not short-term experiments.
  • It establishes baseline soil testing.
  • It reflects cross-agency coordination beyond a siloed conservation effort.
  • Continued funding is tied to demonstrated improvements.

The pilot reflects a growing recognition that regenerative agriculture sits at the intersection of farm economics, environmental stewardship, and public health. By helping cover the financial risk of transition, the program offers producers a way off the conventional input treadmill and toward systems that rebuild soil biology and long-term profitability.

This is a shift from paying farmers to comply with practices to paying them for outcomes. Those outcomes include better food, cleaner water, healthier soil and air, and ultimately healthier people.

Over the past year, I have also had the opportunity to get to know Jimmy Emmons, an assistant chief at the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and a regenerative producer himself. He played a key role in shaping this program. His work, alongside input from leaders across the regenerative agriculture landscape, reflects a serious effort to align policy with on-the-ground realities.

From my vantage point, this represents a meaningful cultural shift. For the first time at this level, senior leaders across USDA and NRCS are openly engaging with soil health as a pathway to farmer profitability and nutrient-dense food. I have witnessed growing curiosity and seriousness within federal agencies about regenerative agriculture. That alone is significant.

Rick Clark’s role underscores that shift. A founding member of American Regeneration, Clark farms 7,000 acres in Indiana using a no-till regenerative system that has reduced his input costs by nearly $2 million annually. Today, he is being asked to show up in Washington to help guide policy.

As Clark put it: “This is historic. The program is well thought out. It is farmer-based and outcomes-based. It is a victory for regeneration.”

So too are the words and presence of Blake Alexander, a California pioneer whose regenerative-certified dairy is now among the most recognized in the country. At the announcement, Alexander described regenerative farming as simply farming in harmony with nature, paying attention to biology and building nutrient density in soil, plants, and animals.

Seeing producers like Clark and Alexander standing at the USDA, leaders who are improving soil health while strengthening farm economics, signals a clear direction for where federal agricultural policy may be headed.

The USDA has now committed significant resources to regenerative agriculture. While $700 million is modest relative to the number of farmers and acres nationwide, this effort is explicitly designed as a pilot. If outcomes are demonstrated, the funding could expand. More importantly, the conversation has changed. Farmers who deliver real, measurable improvements may finally be rewarded for doing so.

Government bureaucracy often struggles to implement new systems, and skepticism remains warranted. I understand that. But progress also requires acknowledging meaningful steps when they occur.

For my world, and for the future of American farming, this moment is worth recognizing.

Let’s regenerate.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times or ZeroHedge.

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