The future of America depends on building resilient farmlands today
Together, we can secure our farmlands to foster prosperity and build a resilient future.
Together, we can secure our farmlands to foster prosperity and build a resilient future.
Accelerating Appalachia has launched an innovative program to support underserved farmers and expand regenerative farming across Central/Southern Appalachia and the rural Southeast.
Building Soil, Building Equity (BSBE) provides financial support, technical training in regenerative agriculture, connections to business development support, and resources to increase market growth opportunities.
“For over 6 years I’ve advised SaraDay and her agriculture accelerator. This new farmer fund they are launching is the best I’ve seen for incentivizing long-term farm sustainability”
— Chris Kummer, Founder of Heartland Chia
Kentucky
Northern Georgia*
North Carolina
South Carolina
Southern Ohio*
Tennessee
Virginia
West Virginia
*See below for list of elegible counties
Northern Georgia: Heard, Coweta, Fayette, Spalding, Henry , Clayton, Fulton, Cobb, Douglas, Carroll, Haralson, Paulding , Polk, Floyd, Chattooga, Walker, Dade, Catoosa, Whitfield, Gordon, Bartow, Murray, Cherokee, Pickens, Gilmer, Murray, Fannin, Union, Lumpkin, Dawson, Forsyth, Gwinnett, DeKalb, Rockdale, Towns , White , Hall , Rabun, Habersham, Stephens , Banks , Franklin , Hart, Elbert, Madison, Jackson, Barrow, Clarke, Oglethorpe, Oconee, Walton, Wilkes, Lincoln, Greene, Morgan, Newton, Taliaferro, Butts, Jasper, Putnam, Hancock , Warren, McDuffie, Columbia, Richmond , Glascock, Jefferson, Burke. Southern Ohio: Clermont, Brown, Adams, Scioto, Lawrence, Gallia, Jackson, Pike, Highland, Ross, Vinton, Meigs, Athens, Hocking, Perry, Morgan, Noble, Monroe, Washington.
We know farm changes require time, money, and effort. Our trusted team of experts will help you navigate these changes. Farmers will be incentivized to adopt Climate-Smart Agriculture and Forestry (CSAF) practices through an $18 million Farmer Fund with $12 million in cash incentives and $6 million in training and marketing services, including specific incentives for BIPOC producers. We offer four types of cash incentives that support program participants, an Implementation Incentive, Drawdown Incentive, Participation Incentive and Travel Incentive.
Farmers enrolled in BSBE will access marketing assistance from industry experts and can benefit from Accelerating Appalachia’s connections to buyers, processors, and distributors. We foster farmer inclusivity across local and regional markets to create more resilient, robust supply chains in food, fiber and forest farming.
As you start to see measurable environmental benefits from implementing and continuing these practices, you’ll gain access to a growing network of lenders and investors. We’ve partnered with Carbon Harvest and Working Trees to help build on Accelerating Appalachia’s regional agriculture-based investment network.
These NRCS practices are applicable to the following commodities: beef, livestock, cotton, fruits, pork, row crops, specialty crops and wool.
*Incentives range depending on practices adopted/implemented, with increased incentives for agroforestry due not only to the additional expense, but the significant increase in drawdown and long term soil health benefits.
The USDA’s Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities funding primarily aims to sequester significant carbon over time and market the value of soil improvement CSAF practices. Therefore, projects involving 10 acres should be focused on agroforestry, while all other projects must commit to a minimum of 20 acres.
Due to overwhelming interest, Accelerating Appalachia has paused accepting new applications to process the volume of existing applicants. The Farmer Enrollment Application will reopen again in 2024.
“You cannot save the land apart from the people or the people apart from the land. To save either, you must save both.”
– Wendell Berry, award-winning author and regenerative farming advocate
“Ecological justice is social justice and social justice is ecological justice.”
– bell hooks, American author and social equity advocate
in memoriam