Federal Crop Insurance Program reforms can help farmers adapt to climate crisis and cut taxpayer costs

Corn field

Farmers both contribute to the climate crisis – they’re responsible for producing at least 11 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions – and can also be devastated by its harmful effects, with extreme weather commonly destroying crop yields.

The Department of Agriculture sends billions of dollars to farmers every year from a multitude of farm subsidy, conservation and crop insurance programs. These programs need to be evaluated to gauge whether they encourage farmers to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to climate change.

Those that do not, like the federal Crop Insurance Program, are in need of reform. The program discourages farmers from adapting to climate change. This report recommends specific policies to reform the program so it better facilitates farmers’ adaptation to the climate crisis and costs taxpayers less.

The Crop Insurance Program discourages adaptation to the climate crisis

Many factors influence premium and premium subsidy costs for specific crop insurance policies: a farm’s historical crop yields, number of acres insured on the policy, type of crop, crop price, level of coverage and risks of potential loss.

Because many of these factors vary with changing weather patterns, the cost of the Crop Insurance Program, including premium subsidies, is highly likely to increase in coming years. Experts predict that, in a scenario of 1 degree Celsius of warming, premium subsidies could increase by 22 percent, and, given 2 degrees of warming, by 57 percent.

More on-farm adaptation to climate change could lower farmers’ risks of crop yield and revenue losses and reduce the cost of crop insurance. But in many ways the Crop Insurance Program effectively discourages farmers from adapting to the extreme weather conditions created by the climate crisis. Here are a few examples:

Crop insurance reforms would reduce costs and facilitate climate adaptation

Reform of the Crop Insurance Program can encourage farmers to adapt to the climate emergency and reduce program costs, including premium subsidy costs that taxpayers pay.

There are many reforms that could help both lower costs and encourage adaptation:

Reforms to the Crop Insurance Program can help farmers adapt to the climate crisis, cut taxpayer costs and facilitate nationwide adaptation to the climate crisis