For other versions of this document, see http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-RL33958 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ¢ ¢ · ¢ ¢ Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress ¢ With a few exceptions (such as milk), the products of animal agriculture are not eligible for the price and income supports that Congress historically has written into farm bills for major row crops such as grains, cotton, and oilseeds. However, the meat and poultry industries do look to the federal government for leadership and support in promoting their exports, resolving trade disputes, and reassuring markets that their products are safe, of high quality, and disease-free. Farm bills can contain policy guidance and resources to help achieve these objectives. Animal producers closely follow the development of farm bills because of their potential impact on production and marketing costs. For example, policies promoting crop-based alternative fuels like ethanol already have contributed to higher prices for corn and soybeans, both important animal feedstuffs. Where additional biofuels policy incentives were being considered for inclusion in a new farm bill, cattle, hog, and poultry producers urged restraint and/or encouraged more use of non-feed crops like grasses and field wastes. Other farm bill issues of interest included proposals from some farmer-rancher coalitions to address perceived anti-competitive market behavior by large meat and poultry processing companies; and proposed changes in food safety laws. A number of animal-related provisions, some potentially quite significant for producers and agribusinesses, were debated during Congress's deliberations on a 2007-2008 farm bill. Several of these proposals advanced to be included in the final version of the farm bill (P.L. 110-246) that became law in June 2008. It contains a new title on Livestock (Title XI) with provisions affecting how USDA is to regulate livestock and poultry markets--but lacking much of the extensive language that had been in the Senate-passed version of the bill. For example, conferees omitted a Senate provision that would have prohibited large meat packers from owning, feeding, or controlling livestock except within 14 days of slaughter. Other livestock title provisions in the final version include permitting some state-inspected meat and poultry products to enter interstate commerce, just like USDA-inspected products; bringing catfish under mandatory USDA inspection; and modifying the mandatory country-of-origin labeling (COOL) law to ease compliance requirements affecting meats and other covered commodities. In the Miscellaneous title (Title XIV), Congress included amendments aimed at further protecting primarily companion animals, which are regulated under the Animal Welfare Act (AWA). Title XV, containing the bill's revenue and tax provisions, creates a new disaster assistance trust fund that could provide new assistance to livestock producers affected by weather disasters. In the 111th Congress, lawmakers' attention likely will be focused on USDA's implementation of these farm bill provisions. Whether they might take renewed interest in provisions that did not pass--for example, the ban on large packer ownership of livestock--was uncertain at the start of 2009. This report will not be updated. Overview ......................................................................................................................................... 1 Economic Backdrop .................................................................................................................. 2 Importance of Trade .................................................................................................................. 3 Issues and Options........................................................................................................................... 5 Market Competition and Packer Concentration ........................................................................ 5 Background......................................................................................................................... 5 Farm Bill Provisions ......................................................................................................... 10 Livestock Mandatory Price Reporting .....................................................................................11 Background........................................................................................................................11 Farm Bill Provisions ......................................................................................................... 12 Meat and Poultry Safety.......................................................................................................... 12 Background....................................................................................................................... 12 Farm Bill Provisions ......................................................................................................... 13 Country-of-Origin Labeling .................................................................................................... 14 Background....................................................................................................................... 14 Farm Bill Provisions ......................................................................................................... 16 Animal Identification for Health Protection............................................................................ 16 Background....................................................................................................................... 16 Farm Bill Provisions ......................................................................................................... 17 Animal Welfare ....................................................................................................................... 18 Background....................................................................................................................... 18 Farm Bill Provisions ......................................................................................................... 18 Feed Prices .............................................................................................................................. 19 Background....................................................................................................................... 19 Farm Bill Provisions ......................................................................................................... 21 Disaster Assistance.................................................................................................................. 21 Background....................................................................................................................... 21 Farm Bill Provisions ......................................................................................................... 22 Environmental Issues .............................................................................................................. 22 Background....................................................................................................................... 22 Farm Bill Provisions ......................................................................................................... 22 Figure 1. Selected Meat and Poultry Exports .................................................................................. 4 Table 1. U.S. Animal Production, 2002........................................................................................... 2 Table 2. U.S. Role in Selected Meat and Poultry Trade .................................................................. 3 Table 3. Selected U.S. Livestock Data ............................................................................................ 5 Table 4. Red Meat Packer Concentration, 1985 and 2005 .............................................................. 6 ¡ Appendix. Summary of Selected Livestock Provisions: New Law Compared with House and Senate 2007 Farm Bills and Current Law............................................................................ 24 Author Contact Information .......................................................................................................... 32 Most of the products of animal agriculture are not eligible for the price and income support programs that Congress has written into farm bills for major crops such as grains, cotton, and oilseeds.1 Nor have meat and poultry producers generally sought such assistance, except ad hoc aid to recover losses caused by natural disasters such as droughts and hurricanes.2 They also do not qualify for federal crop insurance, which covers a portion of the value of production lost to natural disasters. Some cattle and hog producers in a limited number of states do participate in livestock revenue insurance programs being administered by USDA's Risk Management Agency (RMA), which provides protection from revenue losses whether due to natural causes or economic conditions. Animal agriculture does look to the federal government to resolve trade disputes, establish transparent, science-based rules for importing and exporting animal products, and reassure domestic and foreign buyers alike that these products are safe, of high quality, and disease-free. Other longstanding public policy concerns include animal agriculture's obligations with respect to environmental protection, food safety, and animal welfare. Omnibus farm legislation can contain policy guidance and resources related to these objectives. A number of animal-related provisions, some potentially quite significant for producers and agribusinesses, were debated during Congress's deliberations on a 2007-2008 farm bill. Several of these proposals advanced to be included in the final version of the farm bill (P.L. 110-246) that became law in June 2008. It contains a new title on Livestock (Title XI) with provisions affecting how USDA is to regulate livestock and poultry markets--but lacking much of the extensive language that had been in the Senate-passed version of the bill (H.R. 2419).3 For example, conferees omitted a Senate provision that would have prohibited the large meat packers from owning, feeding, or controlling livestock except within 14 days of slaughter. Other livestock title provisions in the final version include permitting some state-inspected meat and poultry products to enter interstate commerce, just like USDA-inspected products; bringing catfish under mandatory USDA inspection; and modifying the mandatory country-of-origin labeling (COOL) law to ease compliance requirements affecting meats and other covered commodities. In the Miscellaneous title (Title XIV), Congress included amendments aimed at further protecting primarily companion animals, which are regulated under the Animal Welfare Act (AWA). Title XV, containing the bill's revenue and tax provisions, creates a new disaster assistance trust fund that could provide new assistance to livestock producers affected by weather disasters. The Appendix at the end of this report provides a side-by-side comparison of selected 1 Milk, honey, and wool are notable exceptions. See CRS Report RL34696, The 2008 Farm Bill: Major Provisions and Legislative Action, by Renée Johnson et al.. 2 For example, agricultural disaster provisions in the FY2007 Iraq war supplemental (P.L. 110-28) included $1.23 billion in assistance for livestock growers for losses caused by certain natural disasters in 2005, 2006, or early 2007. See CRS Report RS21212, Agricultural Disaster Assistance, by Ralph M. Chite. 3 The conference agreement on the 2008 farm bill was originally approved by the House and the Senate as H.R. 2419 and vetoed by the President in May 2008. Both chambers overrode the veto, making the bill law (P.L. 110-234). However, the trade title was inadvertently excluded from the enrolled bill. To remedy the situation, both chambers repassed the farm bill conference agreement (including the trade title) as H.R. 6124. The President vetoed the measure in June 2008 and both chambers again overrode the veto, which made H.R. 6124 law as P.L. 110-246, and superseded P.L. 110-234. provisions relating to animal agriculture (and to nonfarm animals) as they appeared in the House, Senate, and final versions of the farm bill. 2002 ,noitcudorP laminA .S.U .1 elbaT selaS .S.U fo eulaV noitacifissalC yramirP yb smraF .S.U rebmuN a b)000,1$( smraf latoT 289,821,2 553,646,002 smraf porc latoT 526,689 459,151,59 smraf lamina latoT 753,241,1 104,494,501 smraf dna sehcnar elttac feeB 134,466 stoldeef elttaC 274,55 sevlac dna elttaC 481,511,54 c smraf yriaD 735,27 stcudorp dna kliM 661,182,02 sgip dna sgoH 556,33 779,004,21 sgge dna taem yrtluoP 912,44 333,279,32 staog dna peehS 198,34 547,145 seniuqe rehto dna sesroH 144,471 337,823,1 noitcudorp lamina rehtO 117,35 262,458,1 dna deillat neeb tey ton dah erutlucirgA fo susneC 7002 ehT .2002 ,erutlucirgA fo susneC .S.U :ecruoS .8002 yaM fo sa detroper .)SCIAN( metsyS noitacifissalC yrtsudnI naciremA htroN no desaB .a yramirp fo sseldrager smraf lla morf )stnemyap tnemnrevog dna( dlos stcudorp larutlucirga fo eulav tekraM .b .noitacifissalc )SCIAN ,.e.i( .elttac yriad fo dna )sehcnar dna ,smraf ,stoldeef morf gnidulcni( elttac feeb fo selas stneserpeR .c Much is at stake economically: the farm value of animal production was more than $105 billion in 2002, more than half the total value of all U.S. agricultural production (2002 Census of Agriculture). Approximately 1.1 million of the nation's more than 2.1 million farms were classified by the 2002 Census as primarily animal production operations (see Table 1). Producers face much pressure to become larger, more specialized, and more cost-efficient, in order to compete in the increasingly global marketplace. Transactions have been moving away from live cash markets and toward contractual relationships that can provide a guaranteed supply of live animals at predetermined prices and consistent qualities. Many of these animals have been supplied to feeding operations and meat slaughtering/processing plants by Canada (beef cattle, sows and pigs) and Mexico (beef calves), as the beef, pork, and poultry industries of the three North American countries have become more economically integrated over the past two decades.4 4 See William F. Hahn et al., Market Integration of the North American Animal Products Complex (LDP-M-131-01), (continued...) These trends are occurring at a time when feed costs have begun to rise significantly for a variety of reasons, including very strong global demand for grains and oilseeds, higher fuel costs, and the government's promotion of ethanol (now primarily corn-based) as an alternative fuel. The United States is a world leader in the production, consumption, and export of meat and poultry products. One indicator of the increasing reliance of the animal sector on international trade is the share of U.S. domestic production that is exported, a figure that has increased significantly over the past 35 years. Broiler meat exports have grown from 1.3% of production in 1970 to 14.9% of production in 2006 and nearly 16.2% in 2007. Pork exports climbed from 1.3% to 14.3% over the same period (see Figure 1). Beef exports also climbed, from 0.2% of domestic production in 1970 to 9.6% in 2003. When world markets closed to U.S. beef after a Canadian-born cow with bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) was discovered in Washington state late in 2003, exports dropped precipitously to 1.9% of production in 2004. Two more BSE cases subsequently were found in U.S.-born cattle under a more intensive surveillance program, but beef exports are again rebuilding gradually. They reached 5.4% of production in 2007. The United States has long been a dominant world player, but increasing reliance on exports also has brought new challenges. Other countries are competing vigorously for the same country markets. Table 2 discusses the relative position of the United States in world trade of beef and veal, pork, broilers, and turkey. Many years of effort to build export sales can be reversed abruptly due to an animal disease outbreak. When other countries restrict U.S. meat or poultry products, whether due to the discovery of BSE, an outbreak of avian influenza, or some other health problem, it often takes many additional years for the United States to regain those markets, as has occurred in Japan and Korea, the first and third most important destinations, respectively, for U.S. beef prior to the occurrence of BSE here. edar y rtluoP dna taeM detceleS ni eloR .S.U .2 elba T T )7002( knaR setatS detinU noititepmoC ehT dna feeB 2 .on saw ;retropmi dna ,remusnoc ,recudorp 1 .oN ,retropxe gnidael eht gnol ,ailartsuA laev ten a sI .4 .on won ,esac ESB 3002 ot roirp retropxe .lizarB yb 4002 ni dessaprus saw .retropmi kroP 1 .on ;retropmi 4 .on ;remusnoc ,recudorp 3 .oN 3 pot ni osla adanaC dna UE .retropxe ten a sI .retropxe .4 .on si lizarB .sretropxe reliorB weF .retropxe 2 .on ;remusnoc dna recudorp 1 .oN retropxe 1 .on sa .S.U kootrevo lizarB taem .stropmi .4002 ni yekruT .stropmi weF .retropxe ,remusnoc ,recudorp 1 .oN ni deniag sah lizarB retropxe 2 .oN .erahs tekram .8002 lirpA ,edarT dna stekraM dlroW :yrtluoP dna kcotseviL ,SAF ,ADSU :ecruoS (...continued) USDA, Economic Research Service, May 2005. st ropxE y rtluoP dna taeM detceleS .1 erugiF 20 Percent of U.S. Production 15 10 5 0 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2006 Beef Pork Broiler meat .txet ni detic atad 7002 tcelfer ton seod erugiF .seires atad ADSU suoiraV :ecruoS Sometimes a country may impose sanitary or phytosanitary (SPS) standards that affect U.S. imports and that the United States contends are not based on scientific principles or otherwise violate international trade rules. Examples include Japan's and Korea's years of delays in reopening their borders to U.S. beef even though the United States follows what it argues are internationally recognized safeguards. Another example has been the European Union's (EU's) refusal to accept U.S. beef treated with approved growth hormones, despite an international panel siding with the United States when it determined that the EU position was scientifically indefensible. Most animal agriculture organizations expect U.S. agricultural and trade agency officials to lead efforts in resolving such problems and in trying to ensure that they do not arise unexpectedly.5 5 For more information see CRS Report RL33472, Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) Concerns in Agricultural Trade, by Geoffrey S. Becker. The past several decades have seen rapid changes in the structure and business methods of animal agriculture (see Table 3). Production and marketing have been moving toward fewer and larger operations, although the pace of these changes has varied widely across the sectors. ataD kcotseviL .S.U detceleS .3 elbaT 0891 5002 :feeB detekram elttac latoT noillim 2.32 noillim 8.52 sehcnar & smraf woc feeB a295,230,1 071,077 daeh erom ro 005 htiw .tcP %1< %1< yrotnevni woc feeb .S.U noillim 2.53 noillim 8.33 daeh erom ro 005 htiw snoitarepo no .tcP %41 %51 stoldeef elttaC 623,311 891,88 daeh erom ro 000,1 htiw .tcP %1.2 %5.2 daeh erom ro 000,1 htiw snoitarepo morf detekram .tcP %07 %68 :sgip/sgoH yrotnevni gip/goh .S.U noillim 3.26 noillim 7.06 smraf gip/goH 000,766 000,76 mraf rep daeh fo .on egarevA 39 609 fo esu ot eud 1 elbaT ni nwohs esoht morf reffid srebmun mraf no ataD .stroper atad ADSU suoiraV :ecruoS .snoitacifissalc mraf dna sraey gnireffid .atad 8791 .a For example, smaller (i.e., fewer than 100-head) cow-calf operations (where beef cows are bred and born) represent a majority of such operations and hold nearly half of all U.S. cattle. On the other hand, larger (i.e., 1,000-head plus capacity) feedlots, which fatten cattle to slaughter weight, represent a small fraction of total U.S. feedlots but market the majority of fed cattle.6 Cattle feeding is now concentrated in the middle part of the country, where five states marketed 75% of all fed cattle: Kansas, Nebraska, Texas, Oklahoma, and Colorado. Although more widely dispersed, 75% of all U.S. beef cows also reside in the middle states, stretching, approximately, 6 Animal Production and Marketing Issues: Questions and Answers, USDA, Economic Research Service, at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/AnimalProducts/questions.htm. west to east from Colorado and Utah to Kentucky and Tennessee, and from the Canadian to the Mexican borders.7 Live hog production has seen sweeping changes over the past 25 years. The number of U.S. farms with hogs declined from 667,000 in 1980 to 67,000 in 2005; those remaining have become much larger and less diversified. Operations with at least 10,000 hogs now represent less than 1% of all producers but more than half of total U.S. hog output, USDA reports. The average 1980 farm with hogs had less than 100 head and likely raised them from birth to slaughter weight as part of a more diversified crop-livestock operation. In 2005, the average hog farm had more than 900 head and might typically specialize in a single stage of hog production, such as finishing, according to USDA. In fact, the hog production segment of the industry now has about 30 key firms, plus several hundred additional "significant" operators.8 Much of the U.S. hog population is in Iowa, southern Minnesota, and North Carolina. Cattle and hog producers now sell to fewer packers as well (see Table 4). Recent concentration numbers approach those of the early 1900s when 50% to 70% of the market was dominated by five firms which slaughtered several different species of livestock.9 5002 dna 5891 ,noitartnecnoC rekcaP taeM deR .4 elbaT smriF 4 poT yb derethgualS tnecreP epyT 5002 5891 sgoH %23 %36 srefieH & sreetS %05 %08 elttaC llA %93 %17 .ylkeeW sreyuB elttaC dna ADSU :ecruoS Ownership or tight control of multiple production and marketing steps by a single firm (known as vertical integration or vertical coordination, respectively) is more common in the livestock and poultry sectors today than in the past. A 2001 article described this characteristic as "supply chains--tightly orchestrated production, processing, and marketing arrangements stretching from genetics to grocery. Supply chains bypass traditional commodity markets and rely on contractual 7 Cattle-Fax Update, December 15, 2006. 8 Informa Economics, Special Report: The Changing U.S. Pork industry, November 1, 2004, at http://www.informaecon.com/LVNov1.pdf. 9 USDA, ERS, U.S. Beef Industry: Cattle Cycles, Price Spreads, and Packer Concentration. Technical Bulletin No. 1874, April 1999. arrangements among the chain participants to manage the transformation of livestock on the farm to meat in the cooler."10 This business model was pioneered in agriculture by the poultry industry, which began to integrate shortly after World War II. Poultry producers were "the clear leader" in delivering nutritional and convenient products to consumers while at the same time sharply controlling costs, according to Barkema. The hog industry has been following poultry's footsteps. Now typical are contract production arrangements with large integrators who may provide the genetics, piglets and other inputs, and a contracting producer (farmer) who provides facilities and labor. For those who raise livestock, all of these changes have meant fewer cash transactions at auction barns or other open markets, and more frequent, often longer-term business arrangements with buyers and/or processors. Often these arrangements take the form of agricultural contracts, which USDA defines as agreements between farmers and their commodity buyers that are reached before the completion of production. Other alternative marketing arrangements also are used by producers and processors (see "GIPSA Study" below). In 2003, contracts (production or marketing) covered 47% of all livestock production value, up from 33% in 1991-93. This compared with 31% of all crop production in 2003 and 25% in 1991- 93, according to USDA. ¢ A comprehensive study of livestock transaction methods, funded through USDA's Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards Administration (GIPSA), describes a number of "alternative marketing arrangements" (AMAs). The study defines AMAs as all alternatives to the cash market, including forward contracts, marketing agreements, procurement or marketing contracts, production contracts, packer ownership, custom feeding, and custom slaughter. By contrast, cash transactions are those that occur immediately or "on the spot." The study, conducted by the private contracting firm RTI International, determined that all types of AMAs accounted for an estimated 38% of fed (slaughter-ready) beef cattle volume, 89% of finished hog volume, and 44% of lamb volume sold to packers between October 2002 and March 2005, the period studied. Within the beef sector, the 29 largest beef packing plants had obtained 62% of their cattle on the cash or spot market; 29% through marketing agreements; 4.5% through forward contracts; and 5% through packer ownership or other unknown methods. The use of one type of AMA--that is, packer ownership of the livestock they intend to slaughter--accounted for 5% or less of all beef and lamb transactions, but 20% to 30% of all pork transactions, the study found.11 However, the report observed: "Cash market transactions serve an important purpose in the industry, particularly for small producers and small packers." Reported cash prices also are 10 Barkema, Alan, and others, "The New U.S. Meat Industry," Economic Review of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Second Quarter 2001. 11 GIPSA, "Livestock and Meat Marketing Study," accessed May 30, 2008, at http://www.gipsa.usda.gov/GIPSA/ webapp?area=home&subject=lmp&topic=ir-mms. The study was funded by a $4.5 million provision in the consolidated appropriations measure for FY2003 (P.L. 108-7). frequently used as the base for formula pricing for cash market and AMA purchases of livestock and meat, RTI reported. Critics assert that these types of trends in consolidation and vertical control have enabled a relative handful of industry players to dominate markets and have undermined the traditional U.S. system of smaller-scale, independent, family-based farming. Farmers and ranchers now have weakened negotiating power, lower prices, and no choice but to "get larger or get out" of agriculture, they add. Others counter that structural changes in animal agriculture, processing, and marketing are a desirable outgrowth of factors such as technological and managerial improvements, changing consumer demand for a wider range of low-cost, convenient products, and expanding international trade. A number of federal laws and agencies are responsible for ensuring that markets are open and competitive. For example, the Packers and Stockyards Act (P&S Act) of 1921, as amended (7 U.S.C. §181 et seq.) prohibits meat packers and poultry dealers from a variety of anti-competitive and antitrust practices such as engaging in any unfair, unjustly discriminatory or deceptive marketing; or apportioning supplies or manipulating prices to create a monopoly. GIPSA administers the P&S Act. The Agricultural Fair Practices Act (AFPA; 7 U.S.C. 2301 et seq.) was enacted in 1967 to protect farmers from retaliation by handlers (buyers of their products) because the farmers are members of a cooperative. The act, administered by USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS), permits farmers, if they believe their rights under the law have been violated, to file complaints with USDA, which can then institute court proceedings. The Sherman Act (15 U.S.C. §§1-8) and Clayton Act (15 U.S.C. §12 et seq.), which cover but are not specific to agriculture, prohibit certain activities such as mergers and acquisitions that may restrict market access or suppress competition. The U.S. Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission are primarily responsible for administration of these laws. The Capper- Volstead Act (7 U.S.C. §§291-292) confers limited exemption for antitrust liability to farmer cooperatives. ¢ Producers facing fewer buyers for their livestock frequently express concerns about "captive supply," a reference to animals that are either owned by, or committed to, a meat packer prior to the period just before slaughter. When packers buy fewer animals on the spot (open cash) market, reported prices may no longer accurately reflect the preponderance of prices paid, it is argued. A reduction in transparency (i.e., prices and terms that all market players can view equally) works to the disadvantage of the far larger number of producers trying to sell their livestock to the relatively few packers who buy them, it is argued. Some have long argued that to resolve these concerns, a ban should be imposed against packers owning or controlling any livestock until they are ready for slaughter. Legislation to ban packer ownership was considered in the 110th Congress. Opponents of restrictions on packer ownership or control of animals counter that evidence of price manipulation is lacking, that a ban could reverse many of the efficiency gains made by the livestock industry in recent years through closer packer-producer alliances, and that it would limit producers' marketing options. They also cite the results of the RTI study of marketing practices (see above). Some interest groups have been advocating for stronger enforcement authorities, in part because they believe that GIPSA officials have largely failed to enforce existing laws. They point to a recent report by the Department's Office of Inspector General (OIG), which concluded that GIPSA has not adequately overseen and managed its investigative activities. GIPSA had difficulties defining and tracking investigations, planning and conducting complex investigations, and making agency policy, OIG found. USDA's general counsel had not filed an administrative complaint on anti-competitive practices since 1999, due to GIPSA's failure to refer cases, although agency staff were considering dozens of investigations at the time, OIG concluded.12 Among the legislative proposals that were offered to address these concerns: creation of a new USDA Counsel to investigate and prosecute violations of the AFPA and of the P&S Act; establishment of an Agriculture Competition Task Force to examine agricultural competition matters; changes to law intended to make it easier for producers to prove in a court of law that they were treated unfairly by packers; and authorization of additional funding for Department of Justice and USDA investigations of anticompetitive behavior, among others. In the 110th Congress, several bills also were introduced that would amend the AFPA to address what sponsors view as inequities in contracting between agricultural producers and those who buy their commodities. Proposed amendments to the AFPA are intended to address concerns about agricultural consolidation, and the perception that this consolidation has left producers with so few processor-buyers that some of these processor-buyers can and do impose unfavorable contract terms on the producers, forcing them to either accept them or go out of business. In the courts, small farm advocates have brought several closely watched lawsuits, under the P&S Act and several other laws, challenging the contracting and marketing practices of larger packers and/or integrators. These efforts generally have not been successful, which added impetus to calls for including a so-called competition title in a new omnibus farm bill. Advocates called on lawmakers to strengthen existing antitrust authorities, to impose more mandates on the executive branch to enforce these authorities, and to provide new contract protections for farmers, among other options. Opponents of the various AFPA and P&S Act proposals have asserted that buyers use these and other contracting arrangements to ensure a steady supply of animals (as well as other agricultural commodities) to keep high-capacity plants operating efficiently; such arrangements also allow for necessary price adjustments for quality, grade, or other market-prescribed factors. The proposals for change would hurt producers too, because many of them use contracts or other marketing agreements with packers to limit their own exposure to price volatility and to obtain capital, opponents added, again citing the result of the recent RTI study. 12 Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards Administration's Management and Oversight of the Packers and Stockyards Programs, OIG Audit Rept. No. 30601-01-Hy, January 2006. The final farm bill contains a new title on Livestock (Title XI) that scales back much of the language in the Senate-passed version aimed at more closely regulating livestock and poultry markets. For example, conferees deleted Senate language that would have prohibited most major packers from owning, feeding, or controlling livestock except within 14 days of slaughter. Also deleted was a Senate provision to establish at USDA a new Special Counsel for Agricultural Competition to investigate and prosecute violations of competition laws. Title XI of the final conference bill changes the AFPA to alter the definitions of associations and handlers, but Senate provisions intended to strengthen USDA's oversight and enforcement of the act were deleted, as were Senate provisions to give USDA stronger enforcement authorities over live poultry dealers under the P&SA, among other P&SA changes. In their place, conferees added language requiring an annual report detailing investigations into possible violations of the P&SA. Also narrowed was Senate language governing contractual arrangements between producers and integrators. Under the conference compromise, a poultry or swine grower--a more limited definition of a contract producer than in the original Senate bill--has the right to cancel a contract within three business days of execution, unless a later date is specified in the contract. In lieu of Senate language limiting the conditions under which a contractor could require a producer to make additional capital investments, the conference language stipulates that the possibility of such an investment be conspicuously stated in the contract. Several other provisions retained, in somewhat modified form, in the conference bill are intended to give producers additional protections when disputing contract terms. These provisions include a requirement that USDA issue rules on the reasonable period of time a producer should be given to remedy a breach of contract before it is cancelled; and make the venue for any litigation "the Federal judicial district in which the principal part of the performance takes place under the arrangement or contract." At the start of the 110th Congress, Senator Harkin had introduced a wide-ranging bill (S. 622) that, he said, would be "the basis for developing a proposed competition title in the new farm bill this year."13 S. 622 included many of the provisions not retained in the final version. Also introduced and considered during the farm bill debate were bills by Senator Grassley that would have prohibited meat packers from owning or feeding livestock, with some noted exceptions (S. 305); and that would have established a USDA Special Counsel for Competition Matters, a Deputy Attorney General for Agricultural Antitrust Matters in the Department of Justice, and an Agriculture Competition Task Force to examine agricultural competition matters, among other funding and programmatic changes (S. 1759). Several provisions from these bills were in the Senate-passed farm bill. The packer ban would only have applied to packers who were already required to report their prices through the mandatory price reporting law, or packers who slaughter over 120,000 head of cattle each year. The ban would not have applied to ownership arrangements entered into within 14 days of slaughter of the livestock by a packer, or to any cooperative or entity owned by a cooperative. The provision would have allowed for certain transition rules for packers who already own, feed, or control livestock intended for slaughter on the date of enactment of this act. 13 Senator Harkin's statement on S. 622 is in the February 15, 2007, Congressional Record, pp. S2052-S2053. In the House, Representative Boswell, chairman of the House Agriculture Subcommittee on Dairy, Livestock, and Poultry, had introduced the House version of S. 622 as H.R. 2135. However, with the exception of a provision on arbitration clauses in livestock and poultry contracts, other elements of H.R. 2135 were not included in the draft bill forwarded to the full committee.14 The Boswell arbitration provision was further altered during committee markup. The arbitration provision in the House-passed bill directed USDA to establish regulatory standards for arbitration provisions in livestock and poultry contracts. Among other things, such regulations are intended to permit a producer to seek relief in a small claims court, if within the court's jurisdiction, regardless of a contract's arbitration clause. The House-passed bill contained no other major "competition" language. ¢ Under the Agricultural Marketing Act of 1946 (7 U.S.C. 1621-1627), AMS has long collected livestock and meat price and related market information (along with data on commodities such as grains, dairy, and produce). Under the voluntary program, this information has been disseminated by AMS through hundreds of daily, weekly, monthly, and annual written and electronic reports. The goal has been to provide all buyers and sellers with accurate and objective market information. In 1999, Congress passed the Livestock Mandatory Price Reporting (LMPR) Act as Title IX of USDA's FY2000 appropriations act (P.L. 106-78). Its aim was to address some livestock producers' concerns that this voluntary system was no longer working, at a time when animals were more frequently being sold under private marketing arrangements, with prices not publicly disclosed or reported. These producers had asserted that such arrangements made it difficult or impossible for them to determine "fair" market prices. Other producers, and many firms who bought their animals, at first had opposed a mandatory law, arguing that it would impose costly new reporting burdens on the industry and could cause the release of confidential company information, among other concerns. Nonetheless, they eventually accepted a new "consensus" law and generally supported its continuation. LMPR contains a variety of reporting requirements. For example, detailed market information must be reported to AMS by packers, processors and importers who annually slaughter an average of at least 125,000 cattle, 100,000 hogs, or 75,000 lambs, and by importers with average annual imports of at least 2,500 metric tons of lamb meat (Reportedly a total of more than 100 packers or importers are covered.) There are penalties for not reporting. The program has received some 500,000 pieces of data each day; USDA in turn has made the data public through more than 100 daily, weekly, or monthly reports. The program has captured information from 85- 90% of the boxed beef market, 75% of the lamb meat market, 75-80% of the steer and heifer cattle market, 60% of the lamb market, and 95% of the hog market, USDA officials testified in 2005. 14 Another related proposal that was not adopted in the House farm bill was H.R. 2213, introduced by Representative Herseth Sandlin, which would amend the P&S Act with respect to livestock producer-packer forward contracts. The original authority had lapsed several times--but the "mandatory" program continued on a "voluntary" basis"--until the Senate, in September 2006, agreed to a House-passed version (H.R. 3408) extending LMPR with relatively minor changes through September 30, 2010. This measure was signed into law (P.L. 109-296) on October 5, 2006. Some Senators had wanted a shorter extension in order to consider more substantive amendments to the law.15 The new farm bill requires a USDA study of the economic impacts of pork product sales, focusing on wholesale pork cuts, and contains a directive that USDA improve electronic reporting and publishing under the program. The Senate version of the farm bill would have established a new program for mandatory daily product information reporting for manufactured dairy products, and amended the current program for swine to authorize, after an economic study, the mandatory packer reporting of wholesale pork product sales (such as pork cuts and retail-ready pork products), along with making changes to the reporting times of the afternoon swine report. The House bill did not include any changes or additions to the current program. ¢ ¢ Omnibus farm bills--including the one currently before the 110th Congress--periodically address food safety concerns. USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) is responsible for inspecting most meat and poultry for safety, wholesomeness, and proper labeling, under, respectively, the Federal Meat Inspection Act (FMIA; 21 U.S.C. 601 et seq.), and the Poultry Products Inspection Act (PPIA; 21 U.S.C. 451 et seq.). Federal inspectors or their state counterparts are present at all times in virtually all slaughter plants and for at least part of each day in establishments that further process meat and poultry products. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), is responsible for ensuring the safety of virtually all other human foods, including seafood, and for animal drugs and feed ingredients, primarily under authority of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 301 et seq.) A controversial farm bill issue was whether Congress should alter a longstanding ban on the interstate shipment of meat and poultry products that have been inspected by state rather than federal authorities. For many years, state agency officials and smaller meat plants pressed Congress to overturn this federal ban. Twenty-seven states conduct their own inspection of more than 2,000 meat and/or poultry establishments under a parallel safety system to that of the federal government. Meanwhile, many other federally inspected plants in these same states have been permitted to ship across state lines. Proponents of ending the ban argued that the FMIA and PPIA already required state inspection programs to be "at least equal" to the federal system, and that they have been. While state-inspected plants could not ship interstate, foreign plants operating under USDA-approved foreign programs, which are to be "equivalent" to the U.S. program, have been permitted to export meat and poultry products to, and sell them anywhere in, the United States. Advocates for change contended that they should not be treated less fairly than the foreign 15 Voluntary reporting continued until USDA-AMS could promulgate new implementing rules. These were published May 16, 2008 (73 Federal Register 28605-28662). plants; they further contended that foreign programs were not as closely scrutinized as state programs. Those who opposed allowing state-inspected products in interstate commerce argued that state programs were not required to have, and did not have, the same level of safety oversight as the federal, or even the foreign, plants. For example, foreign meat and poultry products are subject to U.S. import reinspection at ports of entry, and again, when most imported meat is further processed in U.S.-inspected processing plants. Opponents also contended that neither the USDA Inspector General (in a 2006 report) nor a relevant 2002 federal appeals court ruling would agree, without qualification, that state-inspected meat and poultry were necessarily as safe as federally inspected products.16 A number of other food safety issues arose during the past year's debate on the farm bill. For example, should companies be required to quickly notify the agencies about potentially adulterated products in the market? Should the food safety agencies be given clearer authorities to recall potentially adulterated products from the marketplace? What about the safety of meat and milk from cloned animals and their offspring? More broadly, should Congress consider a wholesale overhaul of the U.S. food safety system and an update of its underlying legislative authorities? Provisions in the farm bill address some of these questions.17 Among the more prominent provisions is language to permit interstate shipment of state-inspected products under certain conditions, generally modeled after the language in the Senate-passed farm bill. A new program would supplement the current federal-state cooperative inspection program with a provision whereby state-inspected plants with 25 or fewer employees could opt into a new program that subjects them to federally directed but state-operated inspection, thus allowing them to ship interstate. More specifically, the plants would still be inspected by state employees, but these employees would be under the supervision of a federal employee who will oversee training, inspection, compliance, and other activities. States would receive at least 60% reimbursement of their costs (compared with 50% under the existing federal-state program, which could also continue). The Senate language is a compromise package acceptable to both opponents and supporters of House farm bill language, which among other things could have enabled many plants currently under federal inspection to apply for state inspection and continue to ship interstate. Opponents of the House option feared that many would seek to leave the federal system if they believed that could receive more lenient oversight by the states. The state inspection provisions of the House-passed farm bill essentially had been adapted from language found in companion bills H.R. 2315/S. 1150, introduced earlier in 2007 by, respectively, Representative Pomeroy and Senator Hatch. Other bills (H.R. 1760/S. 1149) to strike the interstate bans in the FMIA and PPIA were introduced in 2007 by Representative Kind and Senator Kohl. 16 For a more detailed discussion see CRS Report RL34202, State-Inspected Meat and Poultry: Issues for Congress, by Geoffrey S. Becker. 17 A brief summary of these provisions can be found in CRS Report RS22886, Food Safety Provisions of the 2008 Farm Bill, by Geoffrey S. Becker. Conferees also acted on these other Senate-passed provisions on food safety that were not in the House bill: · Reportable Meat and Poultry Registries. In the Senate but not House bill was a requirement that USDA establish "reportable food registries" for meat and poultry and their products, whereby establishments would have to report whenever there were a probability of such foods causing adverse health consequences. (The FDA amendments legislation passed in 2007, P.L. 110-85, establishes a similar registry for FDA-regulated foods.) The conference substitute amends the meat and poultry laws to require an establishment to notify USDA if it has reason to believe that an adulterated or misbranded product has entered commerce. Another conference provision requires meat and poultry establishments to prepare and maintain written recall plans. · Catfish Grading and Inspection. Conferees modified Senate bill language to provide for new USDA initiatives affecting domestic catfish: a voluntary grading program administered through AMS, and mandatory safety inspection of such products by FSIS (i.e., making catfish an amenable species like other major meat and poultry species). The final version provides for catfish grading as a voluntary fee-based program, with producers of other seafood species eligible to petition USDA for a similar service. In a major change, conferees also agreed to extend mandatory inspection to catfish processors, further authorizing FSIS to take into account the conditions under which catfish are raised and processed. Although other fish and shellfish are not covered by the final amendment, conferees noted in their accompanying report that the Secretary of Agriculture has standing authority to add species if appropriate. The conference report also states the intent of Congress "that catfish be subject to continuous inspection and that imported catfish inspection programs be found to be equivalent under USDA regulations before foreign catfish may be imported into the United States." · Food Safety Commission. Conferees deleted a provision in the Senate bill to establish a Congressional Bipartisan Food Safety Commission that would have been required to report, within one year, on recommendations for modernizing food programs. The Senate bill also would have required the President to review the report and send Congress proposed legislation to implement its recommendations. · Food from Cloned Animals. FDA had asked companies to refrain voluntarily from marketing meat and milk from cloned animals or their progeny until it could complete a final assessment of their safety. Conferees deleted a provision in the Senate bill that would have prohibited FDA from issuing a final risk assessment or from lifting the voluntary moratorium until completion of newly mandated studies on the safety and market impacts of introducing products from cloned animals. ¢ Under §304 of the Tariff Act of 1930 as amended (19 U.S.C. 1304), every imported item must be conspicuously and indelibly marked in English to indicate to the "ultimate purchaser" its country of origin. Some types of products have long been exempted from this requirement, including raw agricultural products such as live animals, meat, poultry, fruits and vegetables, for example-- although their outer containers must contain such labeling. Title X of the 2002 farm bill was to change this, by requiring retailers to provide country-of- origin labeling for fresh beef, pork, and lamb (Section 10816 of Subtitle I).18 First adopted on the Senate floor in late 2001, mandatory country-of-origin labeling (COOL) for meat was to be in place on September 30, 2004, but language in the FY2004 consolidated appropriations act (P.L. 108-199) delayed implementation for meats, produce and peanuts, but not seafood, for two years, until September 30, 2006. Debate over COOL carried into the 109th Congress, which (in USDA's FY2006 appropriation, P.L. 109-97) postponed implementation for an additional two years, until September 30, 2008. This contentious program was again on the farm bill agenda of the 110th Congress.19 The implementation delays had reflected the continuing divergence of opinion among lawmakers over whether a federally mandated labeling program was needed. Some contended that mandatory COOL would provide U.S. products with a competitive advantage over foreign products because U.S. consumers, if offered a clear choice, prefer fresh foods of domestic origin, thereby strengthening demand and prices for them. Moreover, proponents--including producer groups like the National Farmers Union and R-CALF USA (Ranchers-Cattlemen Action Legal Fund, United Stockgrowers of America), and consumer advocacy organizations--argued that U.S. consumers have a right to know the origin of their food, particularly at a time when U.S. food imports are increasing, and whenever particular health and safety problems arise. They cited, as one prominent example, concerns about the safety of some foreign beef arising from the discoveries of BSE in a number of Canadian-born cows (and two U.S. cows) since 2003. Supporters of the COOL law argued that it was unfair to exempt meats and produce from the longstanding country labeling already required of almost all other imported consumer products, from automobiles to most other foods. They also noted that many foreign countries already imposed their own country-of-origin labeling. Opponents of mandatory COOL--which included the American Meat Institute representing many in the packing industry, the Food Marketing Institute representing many retail stores, and producer groups like the National Cattlemen's Beef Association and National Pork Producers Council--countered that studies do not provide evidence that consumers want such labeling. They asserted that COOL is a thinly disguised trade barrier intended to increase importers' costs and to foster the unfounded perception that imports may be inherently less safe (or of lower quality) than U.S. products. Some argued that food safety problems could as likely originate in domestic supplies as in imports, as evidenced by the many dozens of recalls of U.S. meat and poultry products announced by USDA in 2006 and 2007 alone. Opponents pointed out that all food imports already must meet equivalent U.S. safety standards, enforced by U.S. officials at the border and overseas; scientific principles, not geography, must be the arbiter of safety. Industry implementation and recordkeeping costs, earlier estimated by USDA to be as high as $3.9 billion in the first year and $458 million per year after that, would far outweigh any economic benefits, critics added, noting that the 2002 law did not cover red meats that are processed or sold in 18 The 2002 COOL provision also covered seafood, fruits and vegetables, and peanuts. 19 AMS, which is responsible for implementing the program, maintains an extensive website on COOL (at http://www.ams.usda.gov/cool/), with links to voluntary COOL guidelines, the seafood rule, the proposed mandatory rule for the other covered commodities, and a cost-benefit analysis. restaurants, or any type of poultry, a competing product.20 (COOL proponents asserted that USDA exaggerated the implementation costs.) The final farm bill generally contains compromise language that was in both the Senate- and House-passed versions aimed at resolving some of the longstanding differences between COOL supporters and opponents. The final law continues to direct that COOL be implemented on its current schedule--starting October 1, 2008. It also extends COOL to goat meat and to chicken (which competes with red meats in the market and which, unlike red meats, primarily is domestically produced), along with ginseng, pecans, and macadamia nuts. Furthermore, the 2008 farm law creates several new types of label categories intended to facilitate and simplify compliance for the meat and poultry industries and for others. For example, COOL continues to limit use of the U.S.A. country of origin for covered meats only to items from animals that were exclusively born, raised, or slaughtered in the United States, with a narrow exception for those animals present here before July 15, 2008. For multiple countries of origin, retailers may designate such meat products as being from all of the countries in which the animals may have been born, raised, or slaughtered. For meat from animals imported for immediate slaughter, the retailer must cite both the exporting country and the United States. Products from animals not born, raised, or slaughtered in the United States must designate the country of origin. Ground meat products shall include a list of all countries of origin, or all "reasonably possible" countries of origin. Other key provisions are to ease industry record-keeping requirements for audit verification purposes and to lower the penalties for failure to comply with COOL, but extend their application to suppliers as well as retailers. For example, USDA could not require persons to maintain COOL records that are in addition to records kept during the normal course of business.21 Whether animal producers themselves would have to keep detailed records on their animals' identity and whereabouts had long been a controversial aspect of the COOL debate. A number of producers continue to believe that extending such requirements to the farm level is intrusive, costly, and unnecessary for COOL. At the same time, a growing number of producers seems to agree that some type of universal animal identification (ID) program would be a beneficial tool in addressing animal disease problems. Outbreaks of animal diseases like avian influenza (AI), foot and mouth disease (FMD), brucellosis, and tuberculosis are seen as perhaps the greatest potential threats to animal production. Even where U.S. cases have been few (as with BSE) or quickly contained (as with various strains of AI), the impacts can be devastating economically, causing production losses, the 20 USDA's cost estimates are from 68 Federal Register 61955-61974. 21 For more recent developments, including the status of implementation, see CRS Report RS22955, Country-of-Origin Labeling for Foods, by Geoffrey S. Becker. closure of export markets, and a decline in consumer confidence. Some like AI and BSE have the potential to harm humans. USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has lead responsibility on matters of animal health, including animal ID. APHIS has been working on such a program, indicating that it has the legislative authority to implement an animal ID program under the comprehensive Animal Health Protection Act (AHPA), which was adopted as Subtitle E of Title X of the 2002 farm bill. This subtitle updated and consolidated a number of longstanding statutes that had been used to monitor, control, and eradicate animal diseases.22 Despite several years of effort on the part of USDA, as well as industry groups, and states--and public funding totaling an anticipated $128 million through FY2008--a universal U.S. system is not expected to be in place for some time, as policymakers attempt to resolve numerous questions about its design and purpose. Should animal ID be mandated? What types of information should be collected, on what animal species, and who should hold it, government or private entities? To what extent should producer records be shielded from the public and other government agencies? Should animal ID be expanded to traceability of meat and poultry products from farm to the consumer, or used for other purposes such as food safety or certification of labeling claims? How much will it cost, and who should pay? In response, USDA currently envisions a voluntary universal system for all of the major farm and ranch species of live animals, involving a cooperative effort between federal, state, tribal, producer and breed organizations.23 Conferees omitted from the final measure a provision in the Senate bill that would have required USDA to issue regulations addressing "the protection of trade secrets and other proprietary and/or confidential business information that farmers and ranchers disclose in the course of participation" in an ID system. Other bills to establish differing animal health-oriented ID systems, or to require more extensive systems tracing products through the marketing chain, also have not advanced in the 110th Congress. H.R. 1018 would prohibit USDA from carrying out a mandatory animal ID program and also would seek to protect the privacy of producer information under a voluntary system. H.R. 2301 would establish an animal ID system administered by a board of livestock, poultry, and meat industry representatives. S. 1292 would require USDA to implement a more extensive ID and traceability system "for all stages of production, processing, and distribution of meat and meat food products" that are covered by federal meat and poultry inspection laws. H.R. 3485 similarly would require a comprehensive meat and poultry traceability system. Meanwhile, lawmakers have sought to provide guidance and direction on the program through instructions in USDA's annual appropriations and in accompanying report language. 22 See also CRS Report RS22653, Animal Identification: Overview and Issues, by Geoffrey S. Becker. 23 See USDA's website on animal ID at http://animalid.aphis.usda.gov/nais/index.shtml. Farm animals are not covered by the Animal Welfare Act (AWA; 9 U.S.C. §2131 et seq.), which requires minimum care standards for most types of warm-blooded animals bred for commercial sale, used in research, transported commercially, or exhibited to the public. The Animal Care Division of APHIS has primary responsibility for enforcing the AWA and several other animal welfare statutes, including the Horse Protection Act (15 U.S.C. §1821 et seq.) Farm animals are subject to the Humane Methods of Slaughter Act (7 U.S.C. 1901 et seq.), enforced by USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS). The act governs the humane slaughter and handling of livestock (but not poultry) at packing plants. Also, under the so-called Twenty-Eight Hour Law (49 U.S.C. 80502, last amended in 1994), commercial carriers may not confine animals in a vehicle or vessel for more than 28 consecutive hours without unloading the animals for feeding, water, and rest. Generally, many members of the House and Senate Agriculture Committees have expressed a preference for voluntary approaches to humane methods of farm animal care. They state that major food industry players have been developing humane animal care guidelines, and imposing them on their suppliers, in response to a growing number of customers who ask about animal treatment. They cite such changes at McDonald's and Burger King, for example. In January 2007, Smithfield, the nation's largest pork producer, announced that its Murphy-Brown subsidiary would phase out over a 10-year period the use of individual gestation stalls for sows, replacing them with group housing.24 Animal activists have continued to challenge current production practices. They periodically seek new legislation that would further regulate on-farm or other animal activities, such as bills to prohibit the slaughter of horses for human food (currently pending H.R. 503, S. 311);25 to require the federal government to purchase products derived from animals only if they were raised according to specified care standards (H.R. 1726); and to prohibit the slaughter for food of disabled livestock (e.g., S. 394 H.R. 661, and H.R. 2678). Agricultural interests recognize that animal welfare advocacy organizations, like the Humane Society of the United States and others, have large constituencies in many Members' districts, and these organizations have claimed some successes in recent years in winning animal care initiatives in several states and in several lawsuits. However, farm bill animal welfare provisions generally have been limited to AWA amendments, affecting non-farm animals. The 2008 farm law is no exception. It amends the AWA to strengthen prohibitions on dog and other animal fighting activities; defines a dog fighting venture, and increases the maximum imprisonment from three to five years. It also requires HHS and USDA to promulgate regulations 24 Smithfield discusses its animal welfare policies at http://www.smithfieldfoods.com/responsibility/animal.aspx. 25 Court actions by advocates already have forced the closure of the two foreign-owned plants in Texas, and a new state law closed the remaining one in Illinois. prohibiting the importation for resale of dogs unless they are at least six months of age, in good health, and have all necessary vaccinations (there are exemptions for research, veterinary treatment, and certain dogs imported into Hawaii). These provisions generally were in the Senate but not House bill. The final bill also increases maximum fines for AWA violations from $2,500 to $10,000 per violation, and directs USDA to review "any independent reviews by a nationally recognized panel of experts" on the use of certain sources researchers use to obtain dogs and cats and to report on any recommendations as they apply to USDA. Conferees omitted a provision that was in the House but not the Senate bill to prohibit use of live animals for marketing medical devices.26 Feed is the single largest cost for cattle feeders and dairy, hog, and poultry producers, who are wary of government policies that can raise feed prices. These include crop supply control programs to bolster farm prices (rarely used now) and conservation programs like the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), which pays landowners to retire environmentally sensitive cropland for long periods. Strong energy prices and a variety of government incentives had fostered rapid expansion of the U.S. ethanol industry, with national production increasing from 1.8 billion gallons in 2001 to 6.5 billion gallons in 2007. Corn accounts for about 98% of the feedstocks currently used in ethanol production in the United States. USDA estimated in May 2008 that more than 2.1 billion bushels of corn (or 20% of the 2006 corn crop) were used to produce ethanol during the September 2006 to August 2007 corn marketing year. This percentage was expected to rise to 23% in the then- current marketing year and again to 33% in the next year.28 Corn has traditionally represented about 57% of feed concentrates and processed feedstuffs fed to animals in the United States.29 As corn-based ethanol production increases, so do total corn demand and corn prices. Dedicating an increasing share of the U.S. corn harvest to ethanol production could lead to higher prices for all grains and oilseeds that compete for the same land, resulting in higher feed costs for cattle, hog, and poultry producers. In February 2008, USDA projected U.S. livestock feed costs for 2008 at a record $45 billion, up nearly $7 billion or over 18% from the previous year's record. Meanwhile, USDA projected that wholesale prices for nearly all livestock product categories (with the exception of poultry and eggs) would decline in 26 For additional information see CRS Report RS22493, The Animal Welfare Act: Background and Selected Legislation, by Geoffrey S. Becker. 27 Portions of this section are taken from CRS Report RL34474, High Agricultural Commodity Prices: What Are the Issues?, by Randy Schnepf, where more information, including sources for data, may be obtained. Also see CRS Report RS22908, Livestock Feed Costs: Concerns and Options, by Geoffrey S. Becker, and CRS Report RL33928, Ethanol and Biofuels: Agriculture, Infrastructure, and Market Constraints Related to Expanded Production, by Brent D. Yacobucci and Randy Schnepf. 28 USDA, World Agricultural Outlook Board, where monthly supply and demand reports are available at http://www.usda.gov/oce/. 29 USDA, ERS, Feed Situation and Outlook Yearbook, FDS-2003, April 2003. 2008. Rising feed costs (primarily grains and protein meals) cut into profit margins of all livestock sectors (beef, dairy, pork, and poultry).30 With regard to federal incentives, the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (EISA; P.L. 110-140) extended and substantially expanded the existing Renewable Fuel Standards (RFS). Under EISA, the RFS mandates the use of at least 9 billion gallons of biofuel in U.S. fuel supplies in 2009, but grows quickly to 20.5 billion gallons by 2015 and to 36 billion gallons by 2022. The U.S. biofuels sector is also supported by a tax credit of 51 cents for every gallon of ethanol blended in the U.S. fuel supply ($1.00 per gallon of virgin-oil-based biodiesel), and an import tariff of 54 cents per gallon of imported ethanol. In addition, several federally subsidized grant and loan programs assist biofuels research and infrastructure development. Supply distortions could develop in protein-meal markets related to expanding production of the ethanol processing by-product distiller's dried grains (DDG), which averages about 30% protein content and can substitute in certain feed and meal markets. While DDG use would substitute for some of the lost feed value of corn used in ethanol processing, about 66% of the original weight of corn is consumed in producing ethanol and is no longer available for feed. Further, not all livestock species are well adapted to dramatically increased consumption of DDG in their rations--dairy cattle appear to be best suited to expanding DDG's share in feed rations; poultry and pork are much less able to adapt. DDG must be dried before it can be transported long distances, adding to feed costs. There may be some potential for large-scale livestock producers to relocate near new feed sources, but such relocations would likely have important regional economic effects. A Tufts University study has offered another perspective on feed prices, noting: "Any discussion of today's high prices should take into account the extent to which these same firms [i.e., leading U.S. meat companies] have benefitted from many years of feed that was priced well below what it cost to produce. In the nine years that followed the passage of the 1996 Farm Bill [including the first several years of the 2002 farm bill] (1997-2005), corn was priced 23% below average production costs, while soybean prices were 15% below farmers' costs," the authors of the study concluded. This resulted in substantial savings to the poultry and hog industries, and an implicit subsidy over the nine years of $11.5 billion to the broiler industry and $8.5 billion to what the authors termed "industrial" hog operations. Thus, "the leading firms gained a great deal during those years from U.S. agricultural policies that helped lower the prices for many agricultural commodities."31 30 According to the World Bank (among other international institutions), increased biofuel production has been one of the principal causes of the dramatic rise in food prices--almost all of the increase in global corn production from 2004 to 2007 (the period when grain prices rose sharply) went for biofuels production in the United States. Bush Administration officials have disputed this assertion, arguing that only 3% of the more than 40% rise in world food prices in 2008 has been due to increased demand on corn for ethanol. See "USDA Officials Briefing with Reporters on the Case for Food and Fuel USDA," May 18, 2008, accessed on USDA's home page at http://www.usda.gov/wps/ portal/usdahome. 31 Timothy A. Wise and Elanor Starmer, Industrial Livestock Companies' Gains from Low Feed Prices, 1997-2005, Tufts University, Global Development and Environmental Institute, February 26, 2007, at http://ase.tufts.edu/gdae/. Bracketed text was added by CRS for clarification. Tax and tariff policies affecting ethanol and related incentives are outside the jurisdiction of the agriculture committees. However, the committees did include, in their farm bills, incentives for the development of other types of renewable fuels besides corn-based ethanol, such as cellulosic ethanol production, and they expanded research and conservation-related policy options. Separate provisions drafted by the congressional tax-writing committees and included under Title XV of the new farm bill contain a reduction in the ethanol blender's tax credit of 51 cents per gallon. It is to be 45 cents per gallon for calendar 2009 and thereafter, although the credit reduction would be delayed if USDA and EPA determined that annual ethanol production and/or imports did not reach 7.5 billion gallons (including cellulosic ethanol). On the other hand, the 54-cent per gallon import tariff on ethanol was extended for two more years, through calendar 2010. For more detailed information on energy- and conservation-related provisions adopted in the House and Senate farm bills, see CRS Report CRS Report RL34696, The 2008 Farm Bill: Major Provisions and Legislative Action, by Renée Johnson et al. and CRS Report RL34130, Renewable Energy Policy in the 2008 Farm Bill, by Tom Capehart, among other CRS farm bill reports. The federal government has relied primarily on two ongoing policy tools in recent years to help mitigate the financial losses experienced by crop farmers as a result of natural disasters--a federal crop insurance program and emergency disaster loans. Generally, livestock losses are eligible for federal loans, but have not been eligible for federal crop insurance, except under several pilot programs offered in certain geographic areas by USDA's Risk Management Agency (RMA). For example, RMA enables some producers to purchase income insurance protection against losses of pasture, rangeland, and forage.32 Separately, Congress has provided supplemental assistance on an ad hoc basis for crop and livestock losses due to drought or other natural disasters through various emergency supplemental assistance programs.33 The federal crop insurance program is permanently authorized and hence does not require periodic reauthorization in an omnibus farm bill. However, modifications to the crop insurance program were discussed in the context of the omnibus 2007-2008 farm bill. Some policymakers expressed strong interest in expanding the crop insurance program and/or complementing it with a permanent disaster payment program. Others viewed the crop insurance program as a potential target for cost reductions, with savings used to fund new initiatives in various titles of the farm bill. 32 See USDA, RMA, "Pasture, Rangeland, Forage Pilot Insurance Programs" factsheet, revised October 2007, at http://www.rma.usda.gov/pubs/rme/prffactsheet.pdf. 33 See CRS Report RL34207, Crop Insurance and Disaster Assistance in the 2008 Farm Bill, by Ralph M. Chite, from which some of this material was drawn. Under the tax title (Title XV) of the new farm bill, §15101 creates a new Agricultural Disaster Relief "Trust Fund" for crop years 2008-2011, estimated by CBO to cost $3.8 billion over the period. Of the five new programs under which payments could be made are three relating to livestock: · The Livestock Indemnity Program, making payments based on 75% of fair market value of livestock that die in excess of normal mortality rates due to adverse weather; · The Livestock Forage Disaster Program, providing assistance to ranchers with forage losses due to drought, with eligibility requirements and payments based on a formula in the new law; and · Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honey Bees, and Farm-Raised Fish, making available a total of up to $50 million from the Trust Fund for emergency relief to producers of these animals with losses due to adverse weather or other conditions. Questions about the applicability of federal environmental laws to livestock and poultry operations have drawn congressional attention. As animal agriculture increasingly concentrates into larger, more intensive production units, interest arises about impacts on the environment, including surface water, groundwater, soil, and air. Some environmental laws specifically exempt agriculture from regulatory provisions, and some are designed so that farms escape most, if not all, of the regulatory impact. The primary regulatory focus for large feedlots is the Clean Water Act (33 U.S.C. §1251 et seq.), since contaminants from manure, if not properly managed, also affect both water quality and human health. Operations that emit large quantities of air pollutants may be subject to Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. §§7401-7671q) regulation. In addition, concerns about applicability of Superfund (the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (the Superfund law, 42 U.S.C. §§9601-9675) to livestock and poultry operations are of growing interest.34 The House and Senate Agriculture Committees do not have direct jurisdiction over federal environmental law, but they do have a role in the issue. For example, under the conservation title of recent farm bills, including the 2008 bill, the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) has provided financial and technical assistance to farmers to protect surrounding resources; livestock receives 60% of all funds. The new bill extends EQIP through FY2012, 34 Also see CRS Report RL31851, Animal Waste and Water Quality: EPA Regulation of Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs), by Claudia Copeland; CRS Report RL32948, Air Quality Issues and Animal Agriculture: A Primer, by Claudia Copeland; and CRS Report RL33691, Animal Waste and Hazardous Substances: Current Laws and Legislative Issues, by Claudia Copeland. increases budget authority for the program during the period, makes conservation practices related to organic certification eligible for payments, allocates a portion of EQIP money to air quality activities, and provides new mandatory funding for agricultural water enhancement. The new law also reduces the EQIP payment cap from $450,000 to $300,000 per person over six years, with USDA authority to allow up to $450,000 in cases of special environmental significance, such as methane digesters and other new technologies. Other conservation provisions of interest to some segments of animal agriculture include the Conservation Stewardship Program, the Grasslands Reserve Program, and the Wetlands Reserve Program. ]30111 .ceS[ .sgniht rehto gnoma ;ylno smargorp yrtluop rof %06 ot %05 morf mumixam tnemesrubmier laredef eht sesiar ;noitcepsni etats ot tfihs ot noitcepsni ]76011 .ceS[ .snoisivorp rehto laredef rednu yltnerruc stnalp ynam gnoma ,gnitset laredef lacipyt sdeecxe stimrep ;stnemeriuqer laredef ot lacitnedi gnitset negohtap fi stnemesrubmier era stnemeriuqer margorp yek erehw %001 stimrep dna smargorp yrtluop etats a morf yrtluop dna taem detcepsni .ecremmoc etatsretni ni deppihs eb tonnac dna taem htob rof %06 naht ssel ton -etats fo tnempihs eht evorppa dluow yrtluop dna taem detcepsni-etatS .margorp ta tnemesrubmier laredef steS .seeyolpme ADSU yberehw margorp wen a htiw laredef eht )ot lacitnedi ylirassecen ]51011 .ceS[ .gnitset 53-52 neewteb htiw stnalp rof margorp noitcepsni evitarepooc etats ton tub( "ot lauqe" tsael ta era yeht fi laredef deecxe taht gnitset negohtap ytilibigile raey-3 rof sedivorP .seeyolpme -laredef tnerruc secalpeR .stnemeriuqer ,smargorp noitcepsni yrtluop dna taem nwo htiw smargorp rof tnemesrubmier etats gnisu noitcepsni detcerid-yllaredef laredef fo tnemecrofne erusne rieht etarepo ot setats timrep ].qes te 154 %001 edivorp ot noisivorp eht ot meht stcejbus hcihw ,seeyolpme ot yrassecen segnahc eht no dna margorp .C.S.U 12[ )AIPP( tcA noitcepsnI stcudorP tuohtiw ,llib etaneS eht sa emas eht rewef ro 52 htiw stnalp detcepsni-etats noitcepsni etats hcae fo ssenevitceffe eht yrtluoP eht dna ].qes te 106 .C.S.U 12[ yllareneg snoisivorp noitcepsni etatS rof margorp ni-tpo wen a rof sedivorP no ssergnoC ot troper ot ADSU seriuqeR )AIMF( tcA noitcepsnI taeM laredeF ehT noitcepsnI yrtluoP dna taeM .srecudorp kcotsevil rof stroper ecirp etaerc ot desu era atad ehT .ADSU ot noitamrofni dnamed dna ,tcartnoc ,emulov ,ecirp ]10001 .ceS[ fo gnitroper cidoirep edivorp ot sretropmi ]10011 .ceS[ .margorp eht rednu .elbaliava ylcilbup noitamrofni siht ekam dna ,srossecorp ,srekcap seriuqeR gnihsilbup dna gnitroper cinortcele lliw ADSU taht gniyficeps dna ;yduts .sbmal dna ,eniws ,feeb dexob ,elttac evorpmi ot ADSU stcerid oslA cimonoce na gnitcudnoc retfa ,selas evil fo gnitekram eht gnidrager noitamrofni .stuc krop elaselohw no gnisucof ,selas tcudorp krop elaselohw fo gnitroper fo gnitroper yrotadnam fo margorp tcudorp krop fo stcapmi cimonoce eht rekcap yrotadnam sezirohtuA .troper a dehsilbatse ]h6361-5361 .C.S.U 7[ 9991 fo yduts a tcudnoc ot ADSU stceriD eniws noonretfa eht fo emit eht segnahC .noisivorp elbarapmoc oN fo tcA gnitropeR yrotadnaM kcotseviL ehT gnitropeR yrotadnaM kcotseviL )642-011 .L.P( )9142 .R.H( )9142 .R.H( yciloP/waL tnerruC waL weN tnemdnemA etutitsbuS lliB dessaP-esuoH dessaP-etaneS ¡ ¢ dna ,stnemeriuqer noitacifitrec ,gnipeek-drocer sesae ,seitidommoc ]40111 .ceS[ .ecnailpmocnon rof senif ].qes te 1261 .C.S.U derevoc lla roF .)8002 ,51 secuder dna ,stnemeriuqer noitacifitrec 7[ ).5002 ni tceffe otni tnew hcihw ,hsifllehs yluJ erofeb .S.U eht ni tneserp ro( .S.U ,gnipeek-drocer sesae ,seitidommoc dna hsif desiar-mraf dna dliw tpecxe( 8002 eht ni derethguals dna desiar ,nrob derevoc lla roF .)8002 ,1 .naJ erofeb .S.U ,03 .tpeS litnu yltnecer tsom ,seitidommoc ylevisulcxe lamina na morf tcudorp eht ni tneserp ro( .S.U eht ni derethguals derevoc lla rof LOOC yrotadnam fo a sa nigiro .S.U senifed ,.g.e ,seirogetac dna desiar ,nrob ylevisulcxe lamina na noitatnemelpmi deyaled stca snoitairporppA noitangised wen eseht htiw staem morf tcudorp a sa nigiro .S.U senifed ,.g.e .ecnailpmoc-non rof senif dna der rof metsys gnilebal wen a gnitaerc ]40001 .ceS[ ,seirogetac noitangised wen htiw staem ,tnemecrofne ,noitacifitrec ,gnipeekdrocer yb ,staem der hserf rof stnemeriuqer .gnilebal tsevrah fo yrtnuoc rof der rof metsys gnilebal wen a gnitaerc ,stcudorp ASU gnilebal no stnemeriuqer gnilebal eht ot segnahc sekaM gnesnig rof margorp etarapes a setaerC yb ,staem der hserf rof stnemeriuqer steS .seitidommoc larutlucirga elbahsirep .gnesnig dna ,snacep ,stun aimadacam gnilebal eht ot segnahc sekaM .staog dna ,stunaep ,doofaes ,krop ,bmal ,feeb rof ,nekcihc ,taem taog dedda era hcihw ]30001 .ceS[ .seitidommoc derevoc morf decudorp taem sddA .seitidommoc )LOOC( gnilebal nigiro fo yrtnuoc edivorp ot ,seitidommoc derevoc rof 8002 yb nekcihc dna stun aimadacam sekam derevoc rehto dna staem der ot serots doof eriuqer ot 6491 fo AMA eht noitatnemelpmi eriuqer ot seunitnoC rehtruf tub ,llib esuoH eht ot ralimiS rof 8002 yb LOOC eriuqer ot seunitnoC dednema llib mraf 2002 eht fo 61801 .ceS )LOOC( gnilebaL nigirO-fo-yrtnuoC ]61011 .ceS[ .gnidarg hcus rof ylppa ]20001 .ceS[ ot srecudorp doofaes rehto timrep ot .noitartsinimdA gurD dna dooF .noitcepsni yrotadnam dna hsiftac rof margorp gnidarg desab eht yb ro ecremmoC fo tnemtrapeD eht ot tcejbus "seiceps elbanema" senifed -eef yratnulov a hsilbatse ot ADSU yb detcudnoc seitivitca ralimis enimrednu ].qes te 106 .C.S.U 12[ AIMF fo )w(1 .ceS sezirohtuA .dessecorp dna desiar ro ,edepmi ,etacilpud ton llahs smargorp .gnitekram laicremmoc ni ycnetsisnoc dna era hsiftac hcihw rednu snoitidnoc noitacifitrec dna gnidarg hsiftac wen ytimrofinu egaruocne ot sdradnats poleved eht tnuocca otni ekat ot ADSU taht seificepS .AIMF eht rednu "seiceps ot ADSU sezirohtua ]2261 .C.S.U 7[ 6491 sezirohtua ;noitcepsni yrotadnam elbanema" fo tsil eht ot hsiftac gnidda fo )AMA( tcA gnitekraM larutlucirgA eht ot tcejbus ,stcudorp hsiftac erofereht yb ,hsiftac rof seitivitca noitcepsni edivorp fo )c(302 .ceS ]d123 .C.S.U 12[ .sesoprup dna ,seiceps elbanema na ,yraterceS ot ADSU seriuqeR .hsiftac rof margorp gnilebal rof hsiftac rof eman nommoc eht yb denifed sa ",hsiftac" sekaM gnidarg ADSU yratnulov a sezirohtuA .noisivorp elbarapmoc oN dna tekram eht seifitnedi llib mraf 2002 ehT noitcepsnI dna gnidarG doofaeS ]78011 .ceS[ .snoitaluger .1.0808 evitceriD SISF ]71011 .ceS[ .nalp noitatropsnart doof yratinas eussi ni tuo delleps era seicilop llaceR .llacer eht llacer tcudorp a ,gnitirw ni niatniam ot ADSU dna SHH stceriD .tnemssessaer srotinom dna ecnatsissa sedivorp ,secruos dna ,eraperp ot stnemhsilbatse iloC .E na gnivah osla seititne suoirav morf llacer laitnetop a fo nrael seriuqeR .ecremmoc deretne sah feeb htiw ,snalp )PCCAH ,.e.i( noitneverp yam hcihw ,SISF .stcudorp efasnu evomer tcudorp dednarbsim ro detaretluda na ytefas rieht ni snalp llacer edulcni .noitatropsnart ot yrtsudni htiw hcaorppa evitarepooc eveileb ot nosaer evah yeht fi ADSU ot seititne lla seriuqeR .stcudorp rieht doof yratinas ro ,tnemssessaer iloc ,yratnulov a no daetsni gniyler ,stcudorp yfiton yltpmorp ot stnemhsilbatse lla dna yrtluop dna taem rof "seirtsiger doof .E ,snalp llacer ,seirtsiger doof elbatroper yrtluop dna taem fo llacer a etadnam ot eriuqer ot AIPP dna AIMF eht sdnemA elbatroper" hsilbatse ot ADSU seriuqeR gnidrager snoisivorp elbarapmoc oN ytirohtua evah ton seod ADSU ,yltnerruC )642-011 .L.P( )9142 .R.H( )9142 .R.H( yciloP/waL tnerruC waL weN tnemdnemA etutitsbuS lliB dessaP-esuoH dessaP-etaneS tcartnoc htiw laed srecudorp tsissa erom kcotsevil gnillortnoc ro ,gnideef ot dednetni snoisivorp sniatnoC-- ,gninwo morf srekcap rojam stibihorP-- ;dellecnac si ]60201 .ceS[ ti erofeb tcartnoc fo hcaerb a ydemer .sesac livic dna snoitagitsevni ni dia ot ot nevig eb dluohs recudorp a emit fo lesnuoc edistuo kees ot ADSU swollA-- doirep elbanosaer eht sa airetirc hcus ]50201 .ceS[ .snoitaloiv no selur eussi ot ADSU seriuqeR-- rof ydemer kees ot srecudorp swollA-- ;tcartnoc eht fo mret eht ]40201 .ceS[ .smret gnirud deriuqer eb yam stnemtsevni tcartnoc ssucsid ot sreworg swollA-- latipac egral lanoitidda taht tnemetats ]30201 .ceS[ .noitartibra suoucipsnoc a niatnoc ot stcartnoc gnidulcni ,eunev dna noitcidsiruj ].qes te 181 .C.S.U 7[ eniws dna yrtluop seriuqeR-- fo eciohc recudorp rof sedivorP .srelaed yrtluop evil dna ;smret noitallecnac fo .stcartnoc gniruces dna gnillecnac ]20111 .ceS[ .esualc ,srekcap taem ,srelaed ,seicnega gnitekram stcartnoc ni erusolcsid raelc seriuqer gnidrager snoitidnoc seificepS-- noitartibra s'tcartnoc a fo sseldrager kcotsevil ,stekram noitcua dna lanimret dna ,gningis retfa syad ssenisub 3 ot ]20201 ,noitcidsiruj s'truoc eht nihtiw fi ,truoc kcotsevil no gnisucof ,secitcarp edart pu stcartnoc rieht lecnac ot srecudorp .ceS[ .srelaed yrtluop evil revo seitirohtua smialc llams a ni feiler kees ot recudorp citsiloponom dna ,evitpeced ,riafnu tneverp eniws dna yrtluop stimreP-- tnemecrofne ADSU snehtgnertS-- a timrep ot dednetni era snoitaluger hcus ot si wal ehT .seirtsudni taem dna ,yrtluop ]40011 .ceS[ ;tcA S&P eht fo snoitaloiv ]10201 .ceS[ .swal noititepmoc fo ,sgniht rehto gnomA .stcartnoc yrtluop ,kcotsevil eht ni secitcarp gnitekram otni snoitagitsevni gniliated ADSU snoitaloiv etucesorp/etagitsevni ot ADSU dna kcotsevil ni snoisivorp noitartibra etaluger ot ytirohtua cisab eht htiw ADSU morf troper launna na seriuqeR-- ta lesnuoc laiceps wen a setaerC-- rof sdradnats yrotaluger hsilbatse sedivorp ,dednema sa ,)15-76 .L.P( 1291 fo :swollof sa tcA S&P eht sdnemA :swollof sa tcA S&P eht sdnemA ot ADSU tcerid ot tcA S&P eht sdnemA )tcA S&P( tcA sdraykcotS dna srekcaP ehT tcA sdraykcotS dna srekcaP ]40101 .ceS[ .snoitaluger/selur etaglumorp ot ADSU stceriD-- ]30101 .ceS[ .seef syenrotta dna ,egamad ,feiler evitneverp rof gnidivorp ].qes te 1032 .C.S.U 7[ ,sreldnah tsniaga snoitca livic seifiralc .spuorg hcus ot gnoleb ;snoisivorp tnemecrofne eht sdnemA-- yeht esuaceb srecudorp tsniaga etanimircsid ]20101 .ceS[ .secitcarp ro ,etadimitni ,ecreoc ot sreldnah rof ]30011 .ceS[ .stcudorp rieht detibihorp fo sepyt eht snedaorB-- lufwalnu ti sekaM .srecudorp fo noitaicossa gnitomorp ot detacided dna srecudorp ]10101 gnitekram ro gniniagrab a fo srebmem larutlucirga ot detimil ylevisulcxe .ceS[ .spuorg mraf dna yrtluop ,kcotsevil era yeht esuaceb meht htiw laed ot sesufer pihsrebmem htiw snoitazinagro edulcni lareneg edulcni osla ot "srecudorp fo rossecorp a fi ADSU htiw stnialpmoc ot "srecudorp fo noitaicossa" fo noitaicossa" fo noitinifed eht sdnapxE-- elif ot sremraf swolla )882-09 .L.P( 7691 fo noitinifed eht yfidom ot APFA sdnemA :swollof sa APFA sdnemA .noisivorp oN )APFA( tcA secitcarP riaF larutlucirgA ehT tcA secitcarP riaF larutlucirgA ]20011 .ceS[ .ecnailpmocnon rof senif secuder )642-011 .L.P( )9142 .R.H( )9142 .R.H( yciloP/waL tnerruC waL weN tnemdnemA etutitsbuS lliB dessaP-esuoH dessaP-etaneS fo %001 eb ot seicnega etats gnitarepooc ]50111 .ceS[ .stsoc elbigile fo %001 ])2()d(6038 .C.S.U 7[ .detropmi ]11011 .ceS[ .stsoc ot stnemyaP .nalP tnemevorpmI ta seicnega etats gnitarepooc dna srenwo era ro ecremmoc etatsretni hguorht devom elbigile fo %001 ta smargorp lortnoc yrtluoP lanoitaN eht rednu azneulfni yrtluop ot stnemyap noitasnepmoc era dna ,sesaesid ro stsep ot desopxe dna noitceted yratnulov ni etarepooc naiva cinegohtap wol rof margorp edivorp ot eunitnoc dluohs ADSU taht ro htiw detcefni neeb evah ro yrrac taht seicnega etats dna stnapicitrap lortnoc yratnulov eht ni gnitapicitrap dna ;margorp azneulfni naiva cinegohtap yam taht slamina fo lasopsid dna ,enitnarauq yrtsudni etasnepmoc ot yraterceS renwo ro reworg tcartnoc yrtluop wol rof margorp lortnoc yratnulov ,eruzies rof stnuoma noitasnepmoc eht eriuqer ot APHA eht sdnemA yna etasnepmoc ot APHA sdnemA eht gnidrager ssergnoC fo esneS seificeps AHPA fo )2()d(70401 .ceS .ocixeM ni kcit elttac nrehtuos ]60111 .ceS[ .sgniht rehto gnoma eht fo snoitalupop tnatsiser-edicitsep ,ytiroirp hgih a si margorp noitacidare tuoba era snrecnoc tnerruC .noigatnoc kcit revef elttac eht rof nalp cigetarts fo daerps dna noitneverp eht revoc lanoitan a gnitnemelpmi taht dna ;elttac fo osla )sgurD dna dooF( 12 eltiT ,.C.S.U 12 fo esaesid lataf netfo dna ereves a ,sisoisebab snoitceS .]054 .C.S.U 7[ tcA nekiA-egdamlaT fo tnega lasuac eht fo srotcev era kcit eht dna ].qes te 1038 .C.S.U 7[ APHA elttac nrehtuos eht dna kcit revef elttac eht nihtiw stsep larutlucirga lortnoc ro/dna ]80011 .ceS[ eht taht margorp noitacidare kcit revef ,etacidare ,edulcxe taht swal no setats .llib etaneS dna esuoH eht sa emaS ]20301 .ceS[ .llib esuoH eht sa emaS elttac eht gnidrager ssergnoC fo esneS htiw etarepooc ot ytirohtua sah ADSU ]8038 ]01011 .ceS[ .2102-8002YF .C.S.U 7[ .tniop noitartnecnoc rehto ro ,noillim 5.1$ fo snoitairporppa ,draykcots ,esuohrethguals ta slamina .lcni launna sezirohtua ;margorp eht ]40301 ,esaesid ro tsep kcotsevil yna etacidare ro rof noillim 2.6$ naht ssel ton esu ot .ceS[ .21-8002YF rof yllaunna noillim ,lortnoc ,tceted ot serusaem dna snoitarepo ADSU seriuqeR .margorp noitacifitrec 52.1$ fo snoitairporppa sezirohtuA tuo yrrac ot ADSU stcerid ,llib mraf eanihcirt yratnulov a tnemelpmi .margorp noitacifitrec eanihcirt a 2002 eht fo trap sa detcane ,)APHA( tcA dna hsilbatse ot ADSU stceriD tnemelpmi dna hsilbatse ot ADSU stceriD .noisivorp elbarapmoc oN noitcetorP htlaeH laminA eht fo 90401 .ceS ]i411 .C.S.U 12[ .decudortnier ]10111 .ceS[ .noitacidare dna eb yam dna snoitalupop laref ni stsisrep gnirotinom rof margorp ecnallievrus a rof esaesid siht taht era snrecnoc tnerruC deen eht dna ,noitalupop eniws citsemod .snoitalupop eniws .S.U ni noitacidare ]70011 .ceS[ .yrtsudni kcotsevil ]10301 .ceS[ .yrtsudni kcotsevil eht ot esop eniws laref taerht eht seibaroduesp tuo yrrac ot ADSU eritne eht ot taerht eht gnizingocer eritne eht ot taerht eht gnizingocer ezingocer ADSU taht margorp noitacidare stcerid dna snoitairporppa sezirohtua osla ,llib esuoH eht ot ralimiS osla dna ,llib esuoH eht ot ralimiS seibaroduesp gnidrager ssergnoC fo esneS llib mraf 0991 eht fo )d(6052 .ceS smargorP esaesiD dna tseP laminA ]80201 .ceS[ .snoitaluger etaglumorp ot ADSU stceriD-- ]50011 .ceS[ .noitagitil yna rof eunev ]70201 ,smret noitartibra gnidulcni ,setupsid .ceS[ .rethguals ot roirp syad 41 naht )642-011 .L.P( )9142 .R.H( )9142 .R.H( yciloP/waL tnerruC waL weN tnemdnemA etutitsbuS lliB dessaP-esuoH dessaP-etaneS ]06011 .ceS[ .troper s'noissimmoc eht fo stcepsa rehto dna ,selbatemit dna serudecorp gniteem ,stnemeriuqer pihsrebmem seificepS .ecneics elbaliava -tseb dna tnemssessa ksir no desab ]eton 143 .C.S.U 12[ .detnemelpmi era dna noitneverp ezisahpme hcihw ton noisivorP .metsys ytefas doof stnemeriuqer ecruoser dna lanoitazinagro .S.U eht ecnahne ot snoitadnemmocer ekam gnidulcni ,smargorp ytefas doof ot tnediserP eht yb detnioppa noissimmoC ezinredom ot snoitadnemmocer ekam ytefaS dooF rebmem-51 a dehsilbatse dna yduts ot noissimmoC ytefaS dooF )171-701 .L.P( 2002 fo tcA tnemtsevnI .noisivorp elbarapmoc oN nasitrapiB lanoissergnoC a sehsilbatsE .noisivorp elbarapmoc oN laruR dna ytiruceS mraF eht fo 70801 .ceS noissimmoC ytefaS dooF ]50301 .ceS[ .metsys .kaerbtuo DI lamina na ni "noitapicitrap fo esruoc esaesid lamina na fo sruoh 84 nihtiw eht ni esolcsid srehcnar dna sremraf sesimerp lla hguorht rethguals morf slamina taht noitamrofni ssenisub laitnedifnoc ecart ot )SIAN( metsyS noitacifitnedI ro/dna yrateirporp rehto dna sterces laminA lanoitaN yratnulov a no krow edart fo noitcetorp" gnisserdda tnemmoc detarelecca ADSU ,4002 ni ,ytirohtua siht .noisivorp oN cilbup & snoitaluger ADSU seriuqeR .noisivorp elbarapmoc oN rednU .APHA ni noisivorp elbarapmoc oN metsyS noitacifitnedI laminA lanoitaN ]68011 .ceS[ .nalp ecrof ]31011 .ceS[ .2102YF ksat htlaeh lamina na fo noitatnemelpmi -8002YF ,raey lacsif hcae ni yrassecen rof dna dnuf noitacifinmedni sa smus hcus sezirohtuA .sisab recudorp wen a rof 9002YF dna esac-yb-esac a no )dnik-ni ro hsac 8002YF rof noillim 51$ fo snoitairporppa rehtie eb ot( stsoc fo erahs laredefnon sezirohtua ;ytirohtua APHA rednu eht enimreted ot ADSU seriuqeR margorp tnemevorpmi htlaeh lamina ]0138 .C.S.U 7[ .seitivitca .APHA eht fo 11401 .ceS rednu citauqa lanoitan a gnihsilbatse snoitaluger htlaeh lamina tcudnoc ot ,snoitaicossa nalp htlaeh lamina citauqa lanoitan ADSU seriuqer ;pihsrebmem eettimmoc dna stnemnrevog rehto gnidulcni ,seititne a tuo yrrac ot stnemeerga evitarepooc sliated ;htlaeh lamina citauqa lanoitan elbigile htiw stnemeerga evitarepooc otni retne ot ADSU stimreP no eettimmoc yrosivda na sehsilbatsE .noisivorp elbarapmoc oN ADSU sezirohtua APHA fo 11401 .ceS ]80301 .ceS[ .skaerbtuo esaesid cihports -atac fo sesac ni srecudorp kcotsevil fo noitacifinmedni rof hcaorppa detidepxe na tnemelpmi ot srerusni etavirp eht htiw .noisivorp oN krow dluohs ADSU taht etaneS fo esneS .noisivorp elbarapmoc oN .noisivorp elbarapmoc oN ]60301 .ceS[ .stsoc elbigile eht )642-011 .L.P( )9142 .R.H( )9142 .R.H( yciloP/waL tnerruC waL weN tnemdnemA etutitsbuS lliB dessaP-esuoH dessaP-etaneS ]71311 .ceS[ .AWA eht fo ]61241 .ceS[ .ADSU ta deilppa noitces siht fo noitaloiv hcae rof 000,1$ fo eb nac snoitadnemmocer yna woh ]97011 .ceS[ .tnemtcane ytlanep lanoitidda na secudortnI .seitilicaf no troper ot dna ,srehcraeser yb esu B fo sraey 5 nihtiw tuo desahp eb "srelaed hcraeser rof stac dna sgod fo secruos .AWA ssalC no "strepxe fo lenap dezingocer B ssalC" morf stac dna sgod ecruos elbissimrep etalupits ot dna ;noitces eht rednu detaluger snosrep niatrec morf yllanoitan a yb sweiver tnednepedni modnar fo esu taht gnitcerid noisivorp siht rednu detaluger nosrep a fo noitinifed tpecxe stac ro sgod gniyub morf seitilicaf yna" weiver ot ADSU stceriD a tpecxe noisivorp esuoH eht sa emaS eht dnapxe ot 7 .ceS ni egaugnal secalpeR hcraeser stibihorp AWA eht fo 7 .ceS .esneffo etarapes a deredisnoc si yad hcae ]61311 .ceS[ dna noitaloiv hcae ;snoitaloiv rof 005,2$ ot .sgniht rehto gnoma ,esneffo etarapes a pu senif sezirohtuA .seitivitca gnithgif lamina deredisnoc eb ot si noitaloiv a ot tcejbus tneverp ot dna ;detropsnart yllaicremmoc lamina hcae dna ,noitaloiv hcae ,yad hcae ro ,cilbup eht ot detibihxe ,elas laicremmoc ]41241 .ceS[ .detpoda taht seificeps dna ,noitaloiv rep 000,01$ rof derb ,slamina hcraeser fo tnemtaert ton segnahc esuoH rehtO .noitaloiv ot snoitaloiv AWA rof pac eht sesaercnI enamuh eht erusne ot dednetni si hcihw rep 000,01$ ot 005,2$ morf snoitaloiv .gnitekram .secived lacidem gnitekram rof slamina ,].qes te 1312 .C.S.U 7[ )AWA( tcA erafleW AWA rof senif mumixam sesaercnI lacidem no noisivorp elbarapmoc oN evil fo esu tibihorp ot AWA eht sdnemA laminA eht rednu noisivorp elbarapmoc oN tcA erafleW laminA .ytefas no detacude era stekram ]7057 .ceS[ .slamina denolc morf litnu eunitnoc )gnirpsffo ton tub( slamina stcudorp gnicudortni fo stcapmi tekram denolc no muirotarom eht taht deksa eht no dna ytefas eht ,ylevitcepser ,no sah ADSU ;80/51/1 no ecnadiug/tnemssessa seiduts ADSU dna secneicS fo ymedacA ksir lanif eht dehsilbup ADF .ytefas lanoitaN detadnam ylwen fo noitelpmoc rieht no ecnadiug dna tnemssessa ksir lanif litnu muirotarom yratnulov eht gnitfil a setelpmoc ti litnu gnirpsffo dna slamina dna tnemssessa ksir lanif a gniussi morf denolc morf klim dna taem ecudortni ton .noisivorp elbarapmoc oN .noisivorp elbarapmoc oN ADF stibihorP.noisivorp elbarapmoc oN yliratnulov ot seinapmoc deksa dah ADF slaminA denolC morf sdooF ]27011 .ceS[ .noitalsigel ytefas doof evisneherpmoc rof dna ,srentrap gnidart sti dna .S.U eht neewteb stnemeerga rof ,seicnega ytefas doof laredef rof noitcerid dna secruoser lanoitidda rof deen eht no etaneS eht fo esneS sesserpxE .snoitadnemmocer no desab noitalsigel desoporp timbus dna troper eht weiver tnediserP eht seriuqeR )642-011 .L.P( )9142 .R.H( )9142 .R.H( yciloP/waL tnerruC waL weN tnemdnemA etutitsbuS lliB dessaP-esuoH dessaP-etaneS dnuF tsurT eht morf noillim 05$ ot pu fo latot a elbaliava gnikam ,hsiF desiaR -mraF dna ,seeB yenoH ,kcotseviL rof ecnatsissA ycnegremE )3( dna ;wal wen eht ni alumrof a no desab stnemyap dna stnemeriuqer ytilibigile htiw ,thguord ot eud sessol egarof htiw srehcnar ot ecnatsissa gnidivorp ,margorP retsasiD egaroF kcotseviL )2( ]10121 ;rehtaew esrevda ot .ceS[ )ecnatsissa eert ;retsasid porc eud setar ytilatrom lamron fo ssecxe sa llew sa( hsiftac desiar mraf ,seeb yenoh ni eid taht kcotsevil fo eulav tekram dna ;ecnatsissa kcotsevil ycnegreme riaf fo %57 no desab stnemyap gnikam ;ytinmedni kcotsevil :smargorp tnenamrep ,margorP ytinmednI kcotseviL )1( wen rednu edam era stnemyaP :kcotsevil ot etaler eerht .stpiecer smotsuc launna fo %43.3 .]161-011 .L.P yb dednema sa ,82-011 ,edam eb dluoc stnemyap hcihw rednu fo tnelaviuqe eht fo refsnart a hguorht .L.P fo 1009 .ceS[ .sessol noitcudorp 7002 smargorp wen evif eht fO .yrusaerT dednuf si margorp eht ,21-8002YF roF ro ,6002 ,5002 rof ecnatsissa latnemelppus .S.U eht morf stpiecer smotsuc .aera retsasid deralced-ADSU a ni sessol ycnegreme dedivorp ssergnoC launna fo %80.3 fo tnelaviuqe eht fo noitcudorp tnacifingis ecneirepxe ohw ,yltnecer tsoM .retsasid larutan a gniwollof refsnart a hguorht dednuf ,1102-8002 sreworg kcotsevil dna porc ot stnemyap emocni tnemelppus ot sreworg kcotsevil sraey porc rof "dnuF tsurT" feileR sedivorp taht margorp tnemyap retsasid dna porc ot stnemyap retsasid ycnegreme retsasiD larutlucirgA wen a setaerC a rof ytirohtua tnenamrep setaerC .noisivorp elbarapmoc oN coh-da sedivorp yllacidoirep ssergnoC ecnatsissA retsasiD ]5023 .ceS[ .)tnemtaert yraniretev ro hcraeser rof snoitpmexe( snoitaniccav yrassecen lla sah dna htlaeh doog ni si god eht senimreted ADSU sselnu ,ega fo shtnom 6 naht ssel sgod elaser rof gnitropmi gnitibihorp snoitaluger ADSU dna SHH eriuqer ot AWA eht sdnemA .sgod gnuoy fo noitatropmi no noisivorp AWA elbarapmoc oN ]67011 .ceS[ .sraey 5 ot 3 morf ]01241 .ceS[ .iiawaH otni detropmi esoht rof snoitpecxe detimil tnemnosirpmi mumixam eht sesaercnI .slamina dezies lanoitidda htiw ,egaugnal etaneS tcelfer .slamina dezies fo erac fo stsoc rof tcelloc rof gnirac rof derrucni stsoc tcelloc ot yllareneg snoisivorp noitatropmi goD nac ohw dnapxe ot sraeppa dna ;erutnev tnemnrevog laredef eht selbanE ]94 .C.S.U gnithgif god a senifed ;seitivitca gnithgif .sgod gnuoy 81[ .snoitaloiv rof seitlanep sehsilbatse dna ]70241 .ceS[ .egaugnal etaneS tcelfer lamina rehto dna god no snoitibihorp fo noitatropmi laicremmoc ro gnithgif gnithgif lamina ot detaler stca detibihorp yllareneg snoisivorp gnithgif laminA nehtgnerts ot AWA eht sdnemA lamina no snoisivorp elbarapmoc oN fo seires a tuo slleps AWA eht fo 62 .ceS )642-011 .L.P( )9142 .R.H( )9142 .R.H( yciloP/waL tnerruC waL weN tnemdnemA etutitsbuS lliB dessaP-esuoH dessaP-etaneS .)X eltiT( smargorP .IX eltiT suoenallecsiM .)IX eltiT( detaleR dna ,yrotalugeR ,gnitekraM eht fo trap sa snoisivorp erutlucirga .erutlucirga lamina rof eltit etarapes kcotseviL ,eltit llib mraf wen setaerC kcotseviL ,eltit llib mraf wen setaerC lamina tsom sedulcni ;eltit wen oN a edulcni ton seod llib mraf 2002 ehT ]41011 .ceS[ .noitcudorp ygreneoib rof esu sti gnisaercni fo erutlucirga no stceffe dna ,noitazilitu ]70301 .ceS[ .kcotsdeef ygreneoib sti no snoitatimil morf erutlucirga a sa dna snoitarepo larutlucirga lamron dna sremusnoc no tcapmi laitnetop ni desu erunam lamina htiw detaicossa ,rezilitref larutlucirga sa esu erunam )stsoc gnidulcni( seussi cimonoce lamina no troper ADSU seriuqeR laitnetop eht no troper ADSU seriuqeR .noisivorp elbarapmoc oN .noisivorp elbarapmoc oN ]30301 .ceS[ .hcraeser latnemnorivne dna tekram dna tnempoleved ]j8002 .C.S.U ecruoser ,noitcudorp ,gninnalp 7[ .noillim 03$ ta dezirohtua snoitairporppa ssenisub ,tnempoleved erutcurtsarfni dna ,dnuf gnivlover a rof noillim revoc ot 21-8002YF rof yllaunna noillim 82$ fo sdnuf yrot-adnam sedulcni gnidnuF 01$ sezirohtuA .dednepxe litnu elbaliava .tnempoleved erutcurtsarfni no gnisucof eb ot ,8002YF rof noillim 1$ fo gnidnuf .llib etaneS eht ni ,stcudorp taog ro peehs .S.U fo gnitekram yrotadnam wen rof sedivorp dna ,retneC deificeps sa segnahc elbarapmoc rehto oN dna tnemecnahne eht rof ecnatsissa laicnanif tnemevorpmI yrtsudnI taoG dna peehS ]5106 .ceS[ .dnuf gnivlover eht ezitavirp edivorp ot retneC tnemevorpmI yrtsudnI lanoitaN eht sa margorp eht semaneR yllautneve ot tnemeriuqer yrotutats peehS lanoitaN eht dehsilbatse ,dednema ]90011 .ceS[ .margorp eht emaner ton .dnuf gnivlover eht ezitavirp yllautneve setanimilE .)21-8002YF( yllaunna noillim sa ,)tcA noC( tcA tnempoleveD laruR seod tub ,noisivorp etaneS ot ralimiS ot tnemeriuqer yrotutats setanimile oslA 01$ fo snoitairporppa sezirohtuaeR dna mraF detadilosnoC eht fo 573 .ceS snoisivorP rehtO ]10151 .ceS[ .snoitidnoc rehto ro rehtaew esrevda ot eud sessol htiw slamina eseht fo srecudorp ot feiler ycnegreme rof )642-011 .L.P( )9142 .R.H( )9142 .R.H( yciloP/waL tnerruC waL weN tnemdnemA etutitsbuS lliB dessaP-esuoH dessaP-etaneS Geoffrey S. Becker Renée Johnson Specialist in Agricultural Policy Specialist in Agricultural Policy gbecker@crs.loc.gov, 7-7287 rjohnson@crs.loc.gov, 7-9588 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ For other versions of this document, see http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-RL33958