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With support from the Bradley Fund for the Environment, Sand County Foundation and public and private sector partners completed a 6-year dam removal effort that resulted in the Baraboo River running unimpeded for the first time in 150 years.

Agricultural Incentives Program

Since the adoption of the Clean Water Act in 1972 the United States has made substantial progress toward clean up of point source discharges into our waters. However, progress on non-point source pollution lags far behind. Agricultural runoff of surplus nutrients is causing significant degradation of our nation’s fresh and marine waters. The most profound example is the hypoxic zone in the Gulf of Mexico affected immediately by Mississippi River discharge but approximately 80% of the nation’s estuaries face significant eutrophication problems. This degradation results in the loss of productive habitat for fish and wildlife, billions of dollars in lost economic activity, businesses and municipalities being forced to bear the cost of cleaning up contamination generated by others and contributes to increasingly well understood implications for human health. This is one of the nation's most significant environmental problems, yet there is not any systematic policy to address it.

Sand County Foundation has undertaken a long-term commitment to develop a model for reducing non-point source pollution through the use of market based targeted incentives. This initiative focuses specifically on reducing nitrogen runoff into our waterways but has the potential for adaptation for other environmental amenities. The model is designed for large scale regional and national replication.  This initiative can help improve many conservation programs that are currently in place as well as be very helpful in shaping future conservation policies. This project provides four key innovations in the delivery of conservation programs: First, it will demonstrate and evaluate the effectiveness of alternate nitrogen management strategies to reduce agricultural discharge. Second, it will deploy a new model for addressing non-point source discharge through market targeted incentives to farmers. Third it allows more effective targeting of conservation investments to improve the conservation value of invested funds. Fourth, it will provide the tools to shift the metrics of evaluating effectiveness of conservation programs from regulatory compliance or program penetration to where the most improvement of environmental quality is delivered from the investment of conservation dollars.

Strategic Approach

Sand County Foundation has established a consortium of stakeholders and scientific experts to operate a pilot program to demonstrate the use of incentives to reduce nitrogen discharge from agricultural lands into the Upper Mississippi River and elsewhere.

Plan for Action

This program will demonstrate, test and evaluate a variety of techniques for nitrogen reduction.

Creating Increased Economic Opportunity

Establishing a new market mechanism to provide ecological services like clean water (in this case reduced nitrogen contamination of water) has the dual benefits of creating economic opportunities to farmers and farm communities while improving environmental management.

Implications for Public Health

Both municipal and private drinking water supplies are threatened by high levels of nitrogen. Strategies to reduce agricultural discharge of nitrogen may be one of the most cost effective techniques to provide clean drinking water.

North Central Leadership Summit on Nutrient Management & Water Quality

Farm leaders, conservationists, researchers and representatives of agribusiness, municipalities and agencies from around the Midwest gathered in Des Moines, IA in late August 2006 for the North Central Leadership Summit on Nutrient Management and Water Quality.

North South Mississippi Basin Summit II - 2006

Market-Based Incentives to Improve Conservation Delivery: Reducing Nutrient Discharge from Agriculture in the Mississippi Basin.

North South Summit - 2004

This meeting focused on management options that are cost effective and within the reach and experience of farmers.  Special attention was paid to farmer friendly, market based incentives to assist in targeting priority actions


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