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2024 Feedstuffs Feed Ingredient Analysis Table
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Members will help farmers, ranchers and private forest landowners understand how to use science-based practices to reduce emissions, access new income streams through carbon markets.
January 8, 2025
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has appointed 36 members to serve on the newly formed Greenhouse Gas Technical Assistance Provider and Third-Party Verifier Program Advisory Council, informally referred to as to the Growing Climate Solutions Act Advisory Council.
The council will support the Greenhouse Gas Technical Assistance Provider and Third-Party Verifier Program in facilitating the participation in voluntary environmental credit markets by farmers, ranchers and private forest landowners, including beginning, socially disadvantaged, limited resource and veteran farmers. Key activities of the council will include periodically reviewing and recommending changes to the protocols recognized by the program for generating environmental credits, the required qualifications for entities that provide technical assistance to farmers, ranchers and landowners, and the activities available to farmers, ranchers and landowners under the program to prevent, reduce or mitigate greenhouse gas emissions.
“The representatives appointed to this council provide a robust cross section of knowledge and experience to help farmers, ranchers and private forest landowners understand how to use science-based practices to reduce emissions, sequester carbon on their land and access new income streams through carbon markets,” said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack. “The council is key in helping reduce barriers that have hindered the participation of agriculture in voluntary carbon markets and their efforts will ensure consistency, reliability, effectiveness, efficiency and transparency in these markets.”
The council will advise the Secretary of Agriculture on: (1) current methods used in voluntary environmental credit markets to quantify and verify the prevention, reduction or mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions; and (2) ways to reduce the barriers to entry and transaction costs associated with such markets. The council will also submit an initial assessment to Congress about the program, and it will consult with the Secretary regarding subsequent periodic assessments.
Members appointed to the council are:
Nikola Smith, Washington, D.C., USDA Forest Service (1-year term)
James Whetstone, Maryland, National Institute of Standards and Technology (2-year term)
Kathryn Zook, Washington, D.C., USDA Office of Energy and Environmental Policy (3-year term)
Venus Welch-White, Washington, D.C., Environmental Protection Agency (1-year term)
Brent Bible, Indiana (3-year term)
John Bidart, California (3-year term)
Patrick Brown, North Carolina (3-year term)
Grace Brown, Texas (1-year term)
Jeanne Carver, Oregon (2-year term)
Andrea Chu, Texas (1-year term)
Sara Cover, Nebraska (1-year term)
Courtney Hall, Minnesota (3-year term)
Mitchell Hora, Iowa (2-year term)
Brandon Hunnicutt, Nebraska (3-year term)
Mark Isbell, Arkansas (3-year term)
Tom McDonald, Colorado (3-year term)
Roger Noonan, New Hampshire (1-year term)
Dan Sonke, California (2-year term)
Thomas Titus, Illinois (2-year term)
Claire Getty, Tennessee (2-year term)
Edie Hall, Washington, D.C. (3-year term)
Rachael Jamison, Washington, D.C. (2-year term)
Hector Restrepo, North Carolina (2-year term)
Ann Bartuska, Washington, D.C. (2-year term)
Timothy Baye, Wisconsin (1-year term)
Jason Rowntree, Michigan (3-year term)
Ryan Schauland, California (3-year term)
McKenzie Smith, California (2-year term)
Nathan Truitt, Washington, D.C. (2-year term)
Bryan Van Stippen, Minnesota (3-year term)
Carrie Vollmer-Sanders, Washington, D.C. (1-year term)
Max DuBuisson, Massachusetts (3-year term)
Kate Ivancic, Minnesota (2-year term)
Spencer Plumb, Washington, D.C. (1-year term)
Ben Nelson, Iowa (2-year term)
Julius Pasay, Oregon (1-year term)
Terms for this initial board are staggered, as outlined in the Growing Climate Solutions Act. At least 51% of the council must be active farmers, ranchers or private forest landowners.
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