Economics of Soil Health Systems on 30 U.S. Farms


Overview

Farmers and ranchers are businesspeople, and the questions that often present the most significant barrier to adoption of soil health management systems pertain to the business case. The Soil Health Institute partnered with the National Association of Conservation Districts and the United States Natural Resources Conservation Service to interview 30 farmers across the US who have adopted soil health management systems and used partial budget analysis to compare financial returns by quantifying the net economic effect of changes in their production systems. A description of the partial budget analysis approach used by the Soil Health Institute can be found here.


Executive Summary >
30

farms assessed across 20 U.S. states representing a diverse range of cropping rotations.

14

crops with soil health management systems investigated including canola, chickpea, corn, cotton, dried bean, grain sorghum, millet, pea, peanut, rye, soybean, sunflower, walnut, and wheat.

$65

Net farm income increased by an average of $65/acre across 29 farms.

Videos & Fact Sheets

Farms 19-24

Farms 25-30



Partners