Targeting farm conservation perez

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MICHELLE PEREZ | Senior Associate | October 24, 2014Large Landscape Conservation Workshop| Washington, DC

Targeting farm conservation efforts for improving field-level & landscape-level water quality

3 papers on improving water quality through better targeting of U.S. farm conservation funds

www.wri.org/water/water-quality-targeting

DEFINING TARGETING

• Geographic targeting –Prioritizing areas:a. Greatest change in

environmental conditions possible (field)

b. Greatest environmental impairments (landscape)

c. Pristine conditions (landscape)

• Benefit-cost targeting –Identifying acres and practices that can produce the most environmental benefits per dollar spent (e.g., most pounds of N reductions/$)

FIELD-SCALE TARGETING: Solves individual water quality problems

on individual farms

LANDSCAPE-LEVEL TARGETING: Achieving measurable water quality

improvements in water bodies

Targeting for Field Outcomes v. Targeting for Landscape Outcomes

Field-level targeting Landscape-level targeting

Opportunities for Improving Edge-of-field Water Quality

• USDA regional CEAP studies:– Half US cropland (146 M acres) has a “high” or

“medium” need for nutrient and soil loss conservation treatment

– Opportunity: NRCS should translate its CEAP findings into actionable protocols for each State to be able to “find” these priority fields

• WRI’s national targeting study– Used CEAP data & models to predict potential future

improvements in cost-effectiveness

IMPROVING WATER QUALITYA National Modeling Analysis on Increasing Cost Effectiveness through Better Targeting of U.S. Farm Conservation Funds

RESEARCH QUESTIONS

1. How cost effective is the current (BAU) approach?– BAU= $335 M for nutrient & erosion control practices: ’06-’11

2. How much more effective could it be with targeting? – 3 targeting approaches

3. How do results change depending on what environmental benefit is being optimized?

– N, P, & sediment reduction & soil C sequestration

4. If programs were designed to achieve the most cost-effective benefits, where would the funds be spent?

DUAL TARGETING IS MOST COST EFFECTIVE

• Geographic + benefit-cost targeting could result in 7 to 12 times more environmental benefits* per dollar spent than BAU

* Excludes transaction costs

TARGETING MAY MEAN MORE ACRES

16.8

12.8

8.7

Benefit‐CostTargeting forSediment

Dual Targeting forNitrogen

BAU

1.5 times more acres for same $335 M budget

(Millions of acres)

BUSINESS-AS-USUAL ALLOCATION OF NUTRIENT & SEDIMENT REDUCTION FUNDS

FUNDING ALLOCATIONS FOR MULTIPLE BENEFITS OPTIMIZATION (N, P, C)

FUNDING ALLOCATIONS FOR PHOSPHORUS OPTIMIZATION

FUNDING ALLOCATIONS FOR NITROGEN OPTIMIZATION

FUNDING ALLOCATIONS FOR SEDIMENT OPTIMIZATION

FUNDING ALLOCATIONS FOR SOIL CARBON OPTIMIZATION

1. Track environmental metrics in addition to administrative metrics

2. Rank applications according to benefit-cost ratios

3. Conduct pilot projects

4. Improve state funding allocation formulas

RECOMMENDATIONS

LANDSCAPE-LEVEL TARGETING: Achieving measurable water quality

improvements in water bodies

• Rural Clean Water Program (’80 – ’90)- 12/21 projects achieved measurable water quality improvements

• 319 Projects (on-going)- 1/3 of 488 “Success Stories” thanks to ag conservation programs

• NIFA-CEAP Watershed Projects (’13 evaluation)- 6/13 projects achieved measurable water quality improvements

Targeted Watershed Project Successes Rates

Mississippi River Basin

Healthy Watersheds

Initiative

WRI reviewed 60% of ‘10 &

‘11 MRBI projects in each state

Stakeholder & Producer Buy-in

SMART-Q Goals

Geographic Targeting

Monitoring & Evaluation

Cost-Effective-

ness

Adaptive Mgt

STAKEHOLDER FINDINGS

GOAL FINDINGS

Most projects went beyond outputs to set outcome-oriented goals

• All projects set MULTIPLE goals- 93%: output goals (BMP counts &

acres)- 78%: interim outcome goals

(Reduce fertilizer applications rates)- 78%: environmental outcome

goals (Reduce N & P loadings to streams)

• 67% of projects with outcome goals also set quantitative targets

PROJECT-LEVEL GOAL FINDINGS

• 78% of projects mention policy drivers (e.g. TMDLs or Impaired Waters List) but don’t state the project aims to address the driver

• None set ecological restoration goals

• Half of the most ambitious project goals weren’t very SMART-Q

RECOMMENDATIONS:

• Prioritize funds for projects that aim to achieve already existing landscape-scale policy goals

• Write clear, SMART-Q goal statements for both the program & projects

GEOGRAPHIC TARGETING FINDINGS

Initiative lacked targeting rational for each of 43 MRBI areas

• Referenced relevant data but no narrative provided for why each project area was prioritized

- Top SPARROW N & P Loading Watersheds- Impaired Waters Lists- TMDL Lists- Availability of existing monitoring data- Availability of staff resources & interested on-the-ground

groups- Etc.

RECOMMENDATION:

• Provide “targeting narratives” for the targeted watershed projects

Tell the public about it on an MRBI and an RCPP state information clearing house website

MEASUREMENT & EVALUTION FINDINGSA lot of water quality monitoring may be

occurring at a lot of different scales

# Projects monitoring each major

water quality indicator category

Actual water quality indicators mentioned

MEASUREMENT & EVALUTION FINDINGS

• Uncertain Initiative oversight, leadership, & accountability for Initiative-level results- Providing EOF leadership: monitoring moratorium & new protocols- In-stream & watershed-outlet oversight?

• RFP required projects to have a “water quality monitoring and evaluation plan” - Half the projects planned to measure progress towards goal(s)

• Additional clarity is needed regarding - Only half the projects mentioned setting an adequate water quality

monitoring baseline- Only 40% of projects were using a watershed-based plan

RECOMMENDATIONS:

• Ensure leadership & accountability for landscape-scale outcomes Establish MRBI & RCPP HQ & State Coordinators to collect

results data & tell the public about it on the websites

• Establish advisory teams for water quality monitoring, metrics, & modeling

• Prioritize projects with already existing baseline data or using a paired watershed approach

• Require watershed-based planning to help ensure landscape-scale outcomes

Michelle Perez, PhD202-729-7908

mperez@wri.org

Thank You!

wri.org/water/water-quality-targeting

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