HR-7587-119
Referred to the House Committee on Agriculture.
Sponsored by Eugene Vindman (D-VA)
What it does
This bill would amend the National Agricultural Research, Extension, and Teaching Policy Act of 1977 to modify the existing U.S.-Israel Binational Agricultural Research and Development (BARD) Fund. It would expand the fund's geographic scope to include signatories of the 2020 Abraham Accords and Arab states that have normalized relations with Israel, add a new mid-stage research support category, and create a new "BARD Fund Accelerator" program to fast-track cooperative agricultural research. It would authorize $8 million per year for fiscal years 2026–2030 for the existing fund and $12 million per year for the same period for the new accelerator program — a total authorization of $100 million over five years.
Who benefits
U.S. and Israeli agricultural scientists and research institutions who would gain access to expanded funding and accelerator resources. U.S. agricultural businesses and farmers who may benefit from new research outputs, patents, and commercial practices. Abraham Accords signatory nations (UAE, Bahrain, Sudan, Morocco) and other Arab states that have normalized relations with Israel, whose researchers would become eligible participants. Technology transfer intermediaries and agricultural consulting firms. Agribusiness companies that could commercialize research outputs. Rural U.S. communities that may benefit indirectly from agricultural innovation.
Who is hurt
Other U.S. bilateral agricultural research programs that compete for limited discretionary funding and may be relatively deprioritized. Domestic-only agricultural research programs that do not benefit from international partnerships. U.S. taxpayers who bear the cost of the authorization. Research institutions in countries not included in the expanded geographic scope, who remain ineligible. Agricultural researchers in competing nations who may face disadvantage if U.S.-Israel-Abraham Accords partnerships yield commercially valuable intellectual property.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the BARD Fund has a documented track record of efficiency, with Congress's own findings citing a $16 return for every $1 invested across more than 1,300 projects and $315 million in total investment since 1977. They contend that expanding the program's geographic scope to Abraham Accords nations leverages recent diplomatic normalization agreements to build broader regional agricultural cooperation, and that the new accelerator program addresses a gap between basic research and commercial application that has historically slowed the translation of scientific findings into practical agricultural tools.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's $100 million five-year authorization diverts scarce discretionary agricultural research dollars toward a geographically narrow bilateral program rather than broader domestic or multilateral research priorities. They contend that the $16-per-$1 return figure cited in the bill's findings is self-reported and has not been independently verified, and that tying U.S. agricultural research eligibility to the Abraham Accords — a specific diplomatic framework — embeds foreign policy conditions into a science funding program in ways that could complicate future research partnerships or exclude otherwise qualified nations.