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USDA Announces Availability of New Insurance Tools
“These new insurances tools will help farmers and ranchers, especially with operations located in drought-impacted areas, to improve their risk management capabilities,” Johanns said. “Designed to operate in a variety of range and pasture environments, these products utilize innovative technology to determine when a producer has suffered a loss.” The new insurance products — the Rainfall Index Insurance Program and the Vegetation Index Insurance Program — are offered by the Risk Management Agency (RMA) and are available through approved insurance providers. These programs will provide livestock producers the ability to purchase insurance protection for losses of forage produced for grazing or harvested for hay. The Rainfall Index Insurance Program will be pilot-tested in 220 counties in Colorado, Idaho, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, North Dakota and Texas and is based on rainfall indices as a means to measure expected production losses. The Vegetation Index Insurance Program will be pilot-tested in 110 counties in Colorado, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and South Dakota and is based on satellite imagery that determines the productivity of the acreage as a means to measure expected production losses. Together, these pilot programs will be available to provide coverage on approximately 160 million of the 640 million acres of grazing land and hay land in the United States. Development of the two programs was provided through provisions of the Agricultural Risk Protection Act of 2000, which established the development of a pasture, rangeland and forage program as one of RMA’s highest research and development priorities. Both insurance products are designed to allow maximum flexibility for the producer. For instance, producers are not required to insure all their acres, but rather may elect to insure only those acres that are important to their grazing program or hay operation. Further, producers are not required to insure the acreage for the entire crop year. The crop year is divided into intervals and producers may elect to insure their acreage for only those intervals where the risk is the greatest. Farmers and ranchers attending the Beef Cattle Short Course, hosted by Texas A&M University Aug. 7-8 in College Station, Texas, will have the first opportunity to view these new products. In addition to product demonstrations, RMA, along with the contractor, Grazingland Management Systems Inc., will be on-site conducting a workshop as part of the Cattleman's College. Both of these products will be available for sale from crop insurance agents beginning late August 2006. The sales closing date is Nov. 30, 2006. More detailed information about these two new pilot programs is available at www.rma.usda.gov/policies/pasturerangeforage/. — This article provided by USDA. |
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