ACE Agriculture Act
Summary
What This Bill Does
The ACE Agriculture Act amends section 1473H of the National Agricultural Research, Extension, and Teaching Policy Act of 1977, the authority for the Agriculture Advanced Research and Development Authority, or AGARDA. It removes references to the program as a pilot, adds water conservation technologies and innovation to the covered agricultural technologies, and broadens the mission to include export competitiveness, environmental sustainability, water conservation, greenhouse-gas reduction or sequestration, and resilience to extreme weather, drought, infectious diseases, plant and animal pathogens, and pests. It clarifies that the AGARDA Director reports to the USDA Chief Scientist and that no other USDA program head reports to the Director. It requires the Director to maintain qualified staff and lets USDA appoint highly qualified scientific or professional personnel using special authorities. It requires the Secretary to use the AGARDA strategic plan to administer the authority. It raises authorization from $50 million annually for fiscal years 2019 through 2023 to $100 million annually for fiscal years 2027 through 2032, permits the Secretary to use other available USDA funds, bars Commodity Credit Corporation funds for this purpose, and removes subsection (e).
Who Benefits and How
Agricultural technology researchers, land-grant universities, agriculture startups, conservation technology developers, water-conservation innovators, crop and livestock disease researchers, and farmers facing drought or extreme weather benefit from a larger and more permanent AGARDA mission. USDA Chief Scientist offices and AGARDA leadership benefit from clearer reporting lines, a strategic-plan mandate, special personnel authority, and a six-year $100 million annual authorization. Export-oriented producers benefit if funded technologies improve competitiveness.
Who Bears the Burden and How
Federal taxpayers bear the cost of the $100 million annual authorization for fiscal years 2027 through 2032 and any other USDA funds shifted to AGARDA. USDA budget staff, the Chief Scientist, AGARDA managers, and scientific hiring officials must administer the expanded mission, strategic plan, staffing structure, and funding limits. Other USDA programs may compete with AGARDA for available funds, though Commodity Credit Corporation funds are expressly unavailable. Applicants must align research proposals with the broadened resilience, sustainability, export, water, and disease-prevention priorities.
Key Provisions
- Removes the pilot framing from AGARDA and makes the program a standing advanced agriculture research authority.
- Expands AGARDA priorities to water conservation, export competitiveness, environmental sustainability, emissions mitigation, and agricultural resilience.
- Clarifies that the AGARDA Director reports to the USDA Chief Scientist.
- Authorizes qualified scientific and professional staffing for AGARDA operations.
- Requires USDA to use the AGARDA strategic plan when administering the authority.
- Authorizes $100 million annually for fiscal years 2027 through 2032 and bars use of Commodity Credit Corporation funds.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Reauthorizes and expands AGARDA by removing its pilot framing, broadening its mission to water conservation, export competitiveness, environmental sustainability, greenhouse-gas mitigation, and resilience, strengthening its staffing authority, tying administration to a strategic plan, authorizing $100 million annually for fiscal years 2027 through 2032, and allowing other USDA funds except Commodity Credit Corporation funds.
Key Policy Areas
Agriculture, Research & Science, Environment
Primary Purpose
Reauthorizes and expands AGARDA by removing its pilot framing, broadening its mission to water conservation, export competitiveness, environmental sustainability, greenhouse-gas mitigation, and resilience, strengthening its staffing authority, tying administration to a strategic plan, authorizing $100 million annually for fiscal years 2027 through 2032, and allowing other USDA funds except Commodity Credit Corporation funds.
Policy Domains
Substantive provisions
Identified Gains
- Agricultural technology researchers
- Land-grant universities
- Agriculture startups
- Conservation technology developers
- Farmers facing drought
- USDA Chief Scientist staff
- AGARDA leadership
Identified Costs
- Federal taxpayers
- USDA budget staff
- AGARDA managers
- Scientific hiring officials
- Other USDA program offices
- Research grant applicants
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
In CommitteeReferred to the House Committee on Agriculture.
Introduced in House
Mr. Panetta (for himself and Mr. Feenstra) introduced the following …
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Agriculture startups, Farmers facing drought, Water-conservation innovators
AGARDA leadership, USDA Chief Scientist staff
Positive-direction: AGARDA leadership
Negative-direction: USDA Chief Scientist staff
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology