Press Release
New Study Recommends Faster, More Cost-Effective Ways to Clean Up Chesapeake Bay
Less Than One Week before Chesapeake Executive Council's Annual Meeting, Report Suggests Fundamental Changes to Preserve $1 Trillion-a-Year Resource
Posted: 29-Nov-2007
- Targeting funds and attention to conservation practices that have proven most cost-effective in reducing farm runoff
- Making traditional conservation practices -- such as nutrient management, conservation tillage, and cover crops -- more effective by shifting emphasis to performance and outcomes, and by finding ways to make practices pay for themselves
- Increasing research and education on practices -- such as dairy feed management and alternative cropping systems -- that can help both the Bay and farmers’ bottom lines
- Increasing technical assistance resources for farmers, and creating market-based financial rewards for farmers who produce clean water and other environmental benefits
- Improving our abilities to track conservation funding, verifying what practices are actually implemented, and determining the nutrient and sediment load reductions they generate
- Send to friend
- +
- Rate: Avg: --, 0 votes
Most Popular Pages
- Major Strides Made at Climate Talks in Buenos Aires Newsletter article about successes in implementing the Kyoto Protocol
- Americans Want Clean Energy: Poll after Poll Proves It
- In California, Passage of Water Bills Signals New Era EDF helps sparring groups come together to transform water policy
- Cars By The Numbers Statistics on automobiles and their global warming contribution
- On the Way to Safer Fishing, Fresh Fish in Abundance Fishermen's support of a smart fisheries tool means a brighter future for Gulf fisheries.
Blogs Linking To This Release
Here are some of the blogs who've linked to this press release:
To appear in this list, link to this url in your posts.

