Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Natural Resources Conversation Service (NRCS) Tribal Liason David Elliott shows young longleaf pine trees after a prescribed burn at  Poarch Band of Creek Indians  (PBCI) Magnolia Branch Wildlife Reserve (MBWR) , near Atmore, in rural Escambia County, Alabama, on Saturday, April 5, 2014. Over the past several years, about one million long leaf seedlings have been planted at the reserve. A variety of plant grow and helps the soil and wildlife. The burn will help provide

AUBURN, ALABAMA, September 30, 2024– Alabama State Conservationist, Ben Malone, with the USDA-Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) announces that the initial Fiscal Year 2025 Financial Assistance Programs signup deadline is November 1, 2024


Signup Deadline Announced for Alabama’s Financial Assistance Programs

AUBURN, ALABAMA, September 30, 2024– Alabama State Conservationist, Ben Malone, with the USDA-Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) announces that the initial Fiscal Year 2025 Financial Assistance Programs signup deadline is November 1, 2024. Applicable programs include:

NRCS offers voluntary programs to eligible landowners and agricultural producers to provide financial and technical assistance to help manage natural resources in a sustainable manner. Through these programs the agency approves contracts to provide financial assistance to help plan and implement conservation practices that address natural resource concerns or opportunities to help save energy, improve soil, water, plant, air, animal, and related resources on agricultural lands and non-industrial private forest land. More specifically:

CSP: helps agricultural producers maintain and improve their existing conservation systems and adopt additional conservation activities to address priority resources concerns. Participants earn CSP payments for conservation performance—the higher the performance, the higher the payment. NOTE: unfunded FY2025 CSP-Renewals will be automatically deferred to the FY2025 General CSP sign-up.

EQIP: provides financial and technical assistance to agricultural producers to address natural resource concerns and deliver environmental benefits such as improved water and air quality, conserved ground and surface water, increased soil health and reduced soil erosion and sedimentation, improved or created wildlife habitat, and mitigation against increasing weather volatility. Initiatives include Animal Mortality, Climate Smart Ag, Conservation Activities, Feral Swine, Eastern Hellbender, High Tunnel, Irrigation, Longleaf Pine, New and Beginning Farmers, National Water Quality Initiative (NWQI), On Farm Energy, Organic, Shortleaf, Small-Scale-Urban Ag, Socially Disadvantaged Farmers, Strikeforce, Water Quality, White Oak, and Working Lands for Wildlife – Bobwhite Quail and Gopher Tortoise. 

EQIP-CIC: provides financial assistance to address priority resource concerns, including sequestering carbon and improving soil health in high-priority areas. Through these contracts, NRCS works with producers to strengthen the quality and condition of natural resources on their operations using management practices that target resource concerns including degraded soil condition and soil erosion. The focus within Alabama for CIC is to increase the adoption of Cover Crops, Native Warm Season Grasses, Prescribed Grazing, and Residue and Tillage Management on Cropland and Pasture. Conservation Incentive Contracts last five years.

RCPP: promotes coordination of NRCS conservation activities with partners that offer value-added contributions to expand our collective ability to address on-farm, watershed, and regional natural resource concerns. Through RCPP, NRCS seeks to co-invest with partners to implement projects that demonstrate innovative solutions to conservation challenges and provide measurable improvements and outcomes tied to the resource concerns they seek to address. Two projects are available for Streambank Restorations and Longleaf Pine Restoration.

Applications are accepted on a continuous basis; however, selecting applications for funding is completed periodically through batching periods with specific cutoff dates. The first cutoff date will be November 1, 2024. Applications received after this date will be held and considered for subsequent funding announcements as available funding permit (see ACT NOW exception below). 

Through the ACT NOW provision, applications for select Initiatives (announced at a later date) will be assessed and ranked as they are received in the field offices. Based on funds availability, applications meeting a set environmental threshold will be immediately pre-approved.

This initial sign-up will include Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) funded opportunities for all covered programs (CSP and EQIP). In Alabama, applications will be accepted state-wide for both IRA-EQIP and IRA-CSP that include Climate Smart Agricultural and Forestry (CSAF) activities that are set nationally. Within IRA-EQIP, supporting practices may be requested, but will only be included in a conservation plan if they facilitate a CSAF practice. Within CSP, only those enhancements listed as a CSAF enhancement may be included in an IRA-CSP conservation plan.

Special emphasis participants like socially disadvantaged, limited resource, new and beginning, and eligible military veteran farmers and ranchers are eligible for a higher payment rate. In addition, these historically underserved farmers and ranchers are eligible for a 50 percent advanced payment for purchasing materials or contracting to help with practice implementation in EQIP. 

Within EQIP, High Priority and Source Water Protection practices will receive higher payment rates in designated conservation areas within the state. Additionally, in FY2025, Conservation Incentive Contracts will be offered, and all areas within the state are located within the high priority area. In attempt to help more applicants, Local Workgroups may have set Financial Caps for certain practices when utilizing local county funds; established financial caps are posted at the local Service Centers.   

For more information about Alabama NRCS and Programmatic initiatives, priorities and assessment/ranking criteria, visit online at www.al.nrcs.usda.gov. Additionally, visit your local USDA Service Center to determine eligibility; applicants are not eligible for USDA programs until they have ensured all Farm Bill eligibility requirements have been met. You can locate your local Service Center at http://offices.sc.egov.usda.gov.

Contact

Find Your Local Service Center

USDA Service Centers are locations where you can connect with Farm Service Agency, Natural Resources Conservation Service, or Rural Development employees for your business needs. Enter your state and county below to find your local service center and agency offices. If this locator does not work in your browser, please visit offices.usda.gov.