HR-5854-119
Referred to the Subcommittee on Conservation, Research, and Biotechnology.
Sponsored by Joe Neguse (D-CO)
What it does
This bill would amend the National Agricultural Research, Extension, and Teaching Policy Act of 1977 to add a new goal to the Agriculture Advanced Research and Development Authority (AGARDA). Specifically, it would direct AGARDA to develop agricultural technologies that address extreme weather impacts on crops, drought resilience, long-term carbon storage, sustainable energy on farms, voluntary conservation practices, and precision agriculture adoption. It would also add a formal definition of "precision agriculture" to the statute.
Who benefits
Farmers and ranchers who voluntarily adopt precision agriculture technologies that reduce input costs (seed, fertilizer, water, chemicals). Agricultural technology companies and startups that would receive research funding or benefit from expanded AGARDA contracts. Rural communities that depend on farm income stability. Biofuel producers who could benefit from research into on-farm energy feasibility. Soil scientists, agricultural researchers, and university extension programs that could receive AGARDA grants. Downstream food supply chain participants who benefit from more resilient crop production.
Who is hurt
Conventional input suppliers (fertilizer, chemical, seed companies) whose products may face reduced demand if precision agriculture reduces input use. Competing research programs or agencies that may see AGARDA resources redirected toward these new goals. Taxpayers who bear the cost of any additional federal research spending. Agricultural producers who do not adopt new technologies may face competitive disadvantage relative to early adopters who benefit from publicly funded research.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that U.S. agriculture faces growing risks from extreme weather and drought, and that targeted federal research is necessary to develop practical, market-ready tools farmers can voluntarily adopt. They contend that precision agriculture has already demonstrated measurable efficiency gains — studies show it can reduce fertilizer use by up to 15% and water use significantly — and that codifying these goals in AGARDA's mandate ensures sustained federal focus on technologies that improve both farm profitability and long-term land productivity.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that adding broad sustainability and climate-related goals to AGARDA's mandate risks diverting the agency from its core mission of high-priority agricultural research toward politically driven priorities. They contend that the bill's emphasis on carbon storage and climate resilience duplicates existing USDA programs — such as the Conservation Stewardship Program and Environmental Quality Incentives Program — and that expanding agency goals without new appropriations or clear metrics may dilute research effectiveness without producing measurable agricultural outcomes.