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Advancing Markets for Beef Producers

The Beef Producer Economic Resilience Initiative: Producer-Led Mentorship & Marketing Network 

Photo: Long Acre Farm, Virginia

American Farmland Trust’s $27M Beef Producer Economic Resilience Initiative, now part of USDA’s Advancing Markets for Producers (AMP) program, has been newly approved and will be entering a refreshed design and launch phase. The project uses a producer-led network approach to transition 700 beef producers across the MidAtlantic, Southeast, and Texas to profitable, resilient operations using sustainable grazing systems, while building market power through producer-led mentorship and marketing groups. The initiative will invest $19.5M directly in producers to adopt adaptive grazing, improve soil health, reduce risk, and increase returns, and will equip them with tools and training to verify their practices, and with relationships that build the network’s capacity to collaborate on accessing premiums from buyers seeking sustainably grazed beef. By aggregating supply, producer-led standards, and coordinating logistics, we aim to unlock both conventional beef industry premiums and sustainability-linked price premiums that strengthen rural economies and supply chain resilience, while improving soil health and all its co-benefits across the landscape. 

This project builds upon and scales up multiple existing and highly successful pilot efforts that have built technical assistance into peer-to-peer farmer networks through mentorship programs. The expansion of this project will help produce sustainably grazed beef for all levels of markets, from direct sales through local farmers’ markets to regional distribution channels and national and global consumer-facing food companies. 

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Producer and Partner Interest Form

Are you a beef producer, or do you work with beef producers? Sign up here to be notified when AFT’s Beef Producer Economic Resilience Initiative opens grant applications for enrolling mentor and mentee producers, or to let us know you’d like to partner in other ways. Eligible states: Texas (TX), Virginia (VA), Maryland (MA), Pennsylvania (PA), South Carolina (SC), Georgia (GA), Alabama (AL), and Mississippi (MS).

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Projected Impact

Adoption of sustainably grazed systems and producer led marketing group leadership will advance financial health of participating farmers and ranchers and supply chain resilience into the future by: 

  • Increasing producer productivity and returns on investment 

  • Reducing operating costs and risks 

  • Creating additional value in existing markets  

  • Opening doors to new markets with consumers seeking sustainably grazed beef 

  • Building and maintaining healthy, highly functioning soils

  • Reducing erosion and nutrient loss 

  • Improving excess water drainage and storage, and water availability during drought 

  • Improving pasture/range productivity by improved forage growth and quality 

  • Approach that scales to grazing systems nationally  

Financial benefits to producers estimated:  

  • Estimated economic benefits from improved soil health potentially on the order of $60/acre (variable by production system, soils, weather patterns, management).  

  • Estimated economic benefits from marketing group collaboration include the value of standard industry premiums (aggregation and aligning to specs for $30-60/head), and the value of sustainability-linked premiums (practice and/or outcome verification, messaging, and marketing for $20-$100/head). 

By the Numbers

8

States in the South and Mid-Atlantic regions

64

Producer Mentors

700

Beef Producers Improving Grazing Management and Soil Health

Our Methods

Our project leverages the nationally applicable NRCS Soil Health Management Systems (SHMS), commonly known as the 4 Soil Health Principles, as adapted to grazing systems, including minimizing soil disturbance and maximizing soil cover, presence of living roots, and biodiversity (plants and appropriate livestock grazing integration) within the context of each producer. In addition, we will facilitate producers in building a self-sustaining producer-led mentorship and marketing network that improves practice adoption, data capture, and market readiness beyond the project period. 

  • Highly trained early-adopter producer mentors will provide technical assistance and support to new adopters of sustainable grazing practices  

  • Mentorship ensures successful transition to sustainable grazing systems, which drive economically thriving operations.  

  • Producer marketing groups will collaborate to overcome barriers to market entry: aggregate beef volumes, collaborate on logistics and verification, meet industry standards plus network-designed sustainable grazing standards at scale. 

Photo: Remington, VA, Jacob Gilley

Questions? Contact:

Photo of Bianca Moebius-Clune, PhD

Bianca Moebius-Clune, PhD

Climate and Soil Health Director

Photo of Richard Watson

Richard Watson

Senior Regional Soil Health Grazing Specialist

Photo of Taylor Adam

Taylor Adam

Mid-Atlantic Livestock & Grazing Manager

Photo of Gary Coleman

Gary Coleman

Southeast Grazing Mentor Manager

Photo of Evart Outlaw

Evart Outlaw

Texas Grazing Network Sr. Manager

Photo of Aysha Tapp Ross

Aysha Tapp Ross

Soil Health and Microbial Scientist

Photo of Jose Juan Perez Orozco

Jose Juan Perez Orozco

Regional Soil Health Cropping Specialist

Photo of Kiros Hadgu

Kiros Hadgu

Senior Soil Health and Biochar Scientist

Photo of Courtney Owens Ph.D.

Courtney Owens Ph.D.

Southeast Regional Director

Photo of Jamie Mierau

Jamie Mierau

Mid-Atlantic Regional Director & Eastern Managing Director

Photo of Sarah Fulton-Smith

Sarah Fulton-Smith

Texas Regional Director

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