Tuesday, September 30, 2025

NRCS-PA Announces Conservation Funding Opportunities For FY 2026, Deadline To Apply Nov. 1

On September 30, the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service in Pennsylvania announced
fiscal year 2026 assistance opportunities for agricultural producers and private landowners for key conservation programs, such as the Agricultural Management Assistance (AMA) program, Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP), Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), and Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP).  

While applications are accepted on a continuous basis, NRCS utilizes application cutoff periods to assess and rank applications based on their potential conservation impact. 

All applications need to be received by Nov. 1, 2025, to be considered for this first round of funding for fiscal year (FY) 2026. 

Applications received after this date will be held and considered for subsequent rounds, as funding permits.  

Through conservation programs, NRCS provides technical and financial assistance to help producers and landowners make conservation improvements on their land that benefit natural resources, build resiliency, and contribute to the nation’s broader effort to improve natural resource conditions on America’s private lands.   

“NRCS conservation programs are good for Pennsylvania’s natural resources and for your operation’s bottom line,” said Denise Coleman, NRCS State Conservationist in Pennsylvania. “Whether this is your first time working with NRCS or you want to take conservation to the next level on your land, we encourage you to contact your local NRCS service center to learn more.” 

Applying for Assistance 

NRCS accepts applications for its conservation programs year-round. State Technical Committees, composed of representatives from conservation and agricultural-related organizations, work with NRCS to set state-specific priorities to evaluate applications for funding. 

Funding is provided using a competitive process. 

Program Options 

AMA helps agricultural producers manage financial risk through diversification, marketing or natural resource conservation practices. 

NRCS administers the conservation provisions while Agricultural Marketing Service and Risk Management Agency implement the production diversification and marketing provisions. 

CSP helps you build on your existing conservation efforts while strengthening your operation. 

Whether you are looking to improve grazing conditions, increase crop yields, or develop wildlife habitat, we can custom design a CSP plan to help you meet those goals. 

EQIP provides cost share assistance for producers to use 170-plus conservation practices to address a wide variety of natural resource concerns, including but not limited to, water quality, soil health, and wildlife habitat.  

RCPP leverages partnership funding and technical assistance to address targeted resource concerns in a specific geographic area. 

The identified outcomes of the Programmatic Partnership Agreements determine which conservation practices are eligible for cost share assistance. 

For FY26, we have two RCPP projects open for applications. 

-- Project 2712 – Farmland Preservation with PA Department of Agriculture– is a statewide project to implement conservation practices that improve soil health on preserved farms. 

-- Project 2761 – Implementing a strategy to rapidly restore agriculturally impaired streams in Central PA with Chesapeake Conservancy – is available in Lycoming, Union, Snyder, Clinton, Centre, and Huntingdon Counties. 

Additional Producer Benefits 

Special provisions in EQIP and CSP are also available for certain producers, including beginning farmers and ranchers and those who are military veterans, among others. 

Be sure to ask your Service Center about advance payments or higher payment options.    

More Information 

To participate in USDA conservation programs, applicants should be farmers or farm or forest landowners and must meet eligibility criteria.

 To learn more, producers can contact their local service center or visit the NRCS-PA website.  

Producers can also apply for NRCS programs, manage conservation plans and contracts, and view and print conservation maps by logging into their farmers.gov account.

 If you don’t have an account, sign up today.  

Click Here for the NRCS-PA announcement.

Related Article This Week:

-- NRCS-PA Invites Comments On Chester County Mushroom Composting Water Quality Plan; Oct. 15 Webinar  [PaEN] 

[Posted: September 30, 2025]  PA Environment Digest

Environmental Advocates Call On DEP To Reject Permit For A 4.5 GW Natural Gas Power Plant At The Homer City A.I. Data Center Complex In Indiana County

On September 29, Citizens for Pennsylvania’s Future, Clean Air Council, Sierra Club, and Earthjustice
submitted public comments to the Department of Environmental Protection calling on the agency to reconsider its draft approval of a proposed 4.5-gigawatt natural gas power plant in Indiana County – what would be the largest gas plant in the country. 

The Homer City Generation project would produce enough electricity for nearly 3 million homes, but instead would be used largely to power a 3,200 acre data center campus. 

The organizations warned that the project would significantly harm nearby communities while offering little economic benefit. 

If approved as is, the plant would release huge amounts of air pollutants – including ammonia, carbon monoxide, and particulate matter – that cause respiratory and other illnesses. 

Advocates said the project would emit three times more carbon dioxide than any other single facility in Pennsylvania, moving the state further away from meeting its climate targets under the state’s Climate Action Plan. 

At the same time, the project would provide little economic benefit to the community because both data centers and the gas plants that power them have been shown to create few jobs.

DEP As ‘Concierge’ For Project

Signatories also raised concerns about DEP’s handling of the application and any other agency regulatory actions regarding the project. 

DEP said it would act as a ‘concierge’ for companies behind the project, suggesting a troubling willingness to prioritize private industry over its responsibility to protect Pennsylvanians. 

They called on DEP to uphold its constitutional and statutory obligations and ensure that any future decisions comply fully with the state’s constitution and laws.

“If it is built, this facility would be the largest source of carbon dioxide pollution in the Commonwealth – creating carbon pollution without creating commensurate benefits for Pennsylvanians.  The Department must consider its obligations as a trustee of Pennsylvania’s public natural resources and deny this plan approval,” said Jessica O’Neill, managing attorney for litigation at PennFuture.

“Approving an illegal project as deadly as this one would be a massive moral failure on the part of our state government. To heap insult upon injury, the thousands of deaths which would result from the tens of millions of tons of air pollution from this plant would not be in service of keeping the lights on at your home, but instead be for making profits for New York hedge funds and Silicon Valley billionaires. DEP can and must do better for Pennsylvanians,” said Alex Bomstein, executive director of the Clean Air Council.

“Building this plant would lock in an egregious amount of climate pollution – it would be capable of emitting more greenhouse gases than all the cars in Pennsylvania," said Tom Schuster, director of the Sierra Club’s Pennsylvania Chapter. “It would be one thing if the power went to Pennsylvania homes and businesses, but instead it would mostly just fuel the tech billionaires’ AI bubble. Moving this project forward as planned would be reckless, unlawful, and an environmental disaster in the making.” 

“The Department of Environmental Protection says it wants to ‘concierge’ the permit for the largest gas plant in the nation,” said Charles McPhedran, an attorney with Earthjustice. “But DEP does not exist to serve gas plants.  Its mission is to protect the public health of the citizens of the Commonwealth.”

Click Here to read the full comments.

Visit DEP’s Homer City Generation Site Redevelopment webpage for copies of the application and related documents and other background information.

Resource Links:

-- DEP Received Air Quality Permit For 4.6 Gigawatt Homer City Generation Natural Gas Power Plant For Data Center In Indiana County  [PaEN] 

-- DEP Sets Sept. 17 Public Meeting/Hearing On Air Quality Permit For The Proposed 4.5 Gigawatt Natural Gas Power Plant At The Homer City A.I. Data Center Complex In Indiana County  [PaEN] 

-- Rise Of The Machines:  Senate, House Members Express Concern That Demand For Power To Run Computers Is Impacting The Price And Availability Of Electricity For ‘Ordinary People’  [PaEN]  [Homer City Proposal Discussed]

Related Articles This Week:

-- Union Of Concerned Scientists Reports 16 A.I./Data Center Electric Transmission Projects In PA Imposed $461.8 Million In Costs On Ratepayers In 2024  [PaEN] 

-- Water At Risk: PJM Grid Operator And Why Electric Bills Keep Climbing In Monroe County - By Carol Hillestad for Brodhead Watershed Association [PaEN]  

-- Penn State Extension Hosts Nov. 19 Webinar On A.I. Data Centers And Water Resources  [PaEN] 

-- In Case You Missed It: A.I./Data Center Articles - NewClips From Last Week - October 6  [PaEN] 

NewsClips:

-- Bloomberg: A.I. Data Centers Are Sending Power Bills Soaring, Wholesale Electricity Costs Up As Much As 267%  [PDF of Article

-- Utility Dive: Report: Customers In PJM States Paid $4.4 Billion For A.I. Data Center Electric Transmission In 2024; In Pennsylvania $492 Million

-- Utility Dive: A.I. Data Centers ‘Primary Reason’ For High PJM Electricity Capacity Prices, According To Market Monitor [‘Misleading’ To Say Its Tightening Of Supply And Demand] 

-- WIRED: Why US Power Bills Are Surging: Rising Electricity Demand, Volatile Fuel Prices, Tariffs, Long Delays Adding New Generation [Not Renewables, The Cheapest Source Of New Generation]

-- Wilkes-Barre Times-Leader Guest Essay: Don’t Let A.I. Data Centers Stick Us With The Bill - By Frank Lasee, Truth In Energy and Climate 

-- PPL Utilities Files For 6.98% Electric Rate Increase Boosting Residential Customer Bills By $160.44 A Year Or $13.37/Month  

-- Morning Call: PPL Electric Requesting Nearly 7% Rate Increase; Here’s What It Could Mean To Your Bill

-- Bloomberg: A.I.- Driven Demand For Natural Gas Generation Turbines Vastly Outpacing Supply, Threatening World’s Ability To Keep Up With Electricity Demand 

PA Oil & Gas Industry Public Notice Dashboards:

-- PA Oil & Gas Weekly Compliance Dashboard - Sept. 27 to Oct. 3 - 940,000 Gallon Shale Gas Wastewater Spill; Order Ceasing Production Of 551 Conventional Wells; Is Conventional Well Owner Abandoning 475 Wells In 6 Counties?  [PaEN] 

-- PA Oil & Gas Industrial Facilities: Permit Notices, Opportunities To Comment - October 4 [PaEN] 

     -- DEP Opportunity To Bid On Plugging 15 Abandoned Conventional Oil, Gas Wells At Taxpayer Expense In Butler County

     -- DEP Invites Comments On Air Quality Permit For 77 Emergency Power Generators At The Amazon Data Center In Salem Twp., Luzerne County  [PaEN] 

     -- DEP To Hold Nov. 14 Hearing On Renewal Of An Air Quality Permit For The Coal, Natural Gas-Fired Brunner Island Power Plant In York County  [PaEN] 

     -- DEP Invites Comments On An Air Quality Permit For The Tenaska PA Partners, LLC Natural Gas-Fired Power Plant In Westmoreland County  [PaEN]  

     -- DEP Accepting Comments On The Renewal Of An Air Quality Permit For The Wolf Run Energy, LLC Natural Gas Power Plant In Bradford County   [PaEN] 

     -- DEP: Comments Now Being Accepted For An Air Quality Permit For The Hunterstown Power, LLC Peaking Electric Generation Facility In Adams County  [PaEN]  

     -- DEP Sets 3 Hearings On Air Quality Standards For Plastics Resin Manufacturers Shell Chemical Appalachia, Rohm & Haas Co. Multi Plastics Extrusions  [PaEN]

-- DEP Posted 74 Pages Of Permit-Related Notices In October 4 PA Bulletin  [PaEN]  

Related Articles This Week:

-- DEP Names Seth Pelepko, P.G. Deputy Secretary For Oil & Gas Management  [PaEN]  

-- DEP: EQT Production Co. Challenges Records Requests In Ongoing Investigation Of The 2020-21 Release Of 940,000 Gallons Of Shale Gas Wastewater In North Bethlehem Twp., Washington County And Similar Failures At At Least 6 Other EQT Well Pads  [PaEN] 

-- DEP Orders Stonehaven Energy To ‘Immediately Cease And Desist Producing, Extracting, Or Injecting’ Oil, Natural Gas, Wastewater From 551 Conventional Wells In Clarion, Clearfield, Forest, Indiana, Jefferson, McKean, Venango, Warren Counties  [PaEN] 

-- DEP Orders Timberline Energy, Inc. To Submit Production, Waste, Well Integrity Reports For 475 Conventional Oil, Gas Wells In 6 Counties; Recent Inspections Show Many Wells Appear Abandoned  [PaEN]

-- DEP: Blackhill Energy LLC 2nd ‘Inadvertent Return’ During Horizontal Drilling Of Brad-Tenn Loop Pipeline In Bradford County  [PaEN] 

-- KYW: Energy Transfer/Sunoco Starts Pipeline Maintenance Work After Jet Fuel Leak Contaminated Water Wells In Bucks County Beginning In 2023 

-- DEP: Conventional Gas Well Owner Uses Wastewater To Water Freshly Seeded Well Site, Discharging Wastewater Into Ditch, Storm Sewer In Warren County  [PaEN]  

-- DEP Moves To Dismiss BCD Properties Appeal Challenging A DEP Letter Advising It Does Not Comply With Waste Regulations Allowing The Disposal Of Its Oil And Gas Wastewater By Road Dumping  [PaEN]

-- Inside Climate News - Kyle Bagenstose: Appeal Could Make It Easy For Conventional Oil & Gas Well Owners To Dispose Of Their Wastewater By Road Dumping 

NewsClips:

-- TribLive Letter: Pollution Coming To Creeks Near You, New Shale Gas Drilling Permits Filed With DEP In Affecting 4 Townships In Allegheny, Butler Counties - By Eric Greisinger, Forest Steward Of Greisinger Family Tree Farm

-- The Derrick: Drake Energy Security Forum Returns To Oil City Oct. 13-14 Bringing Officials, Industry Leaders And Experts From Around The Globe  [PDF of Article]   [Drake Forum website]

-- Wyoming County Press Examiner: Oil & Gas Landowner Alliance To Hold Town Hall Meeting Oct. 2 At Montrose VFW 

-- Mass Transit/Centre Daily Times: Centre Area Transportation Authority Switch To Renewable Natural Gas Seen As An ‘Important Milestone’ 

-- Beaver Times Guest Essay: Shell Petrochemical Plant Amplifies Misleading Claims About Beaver County Population Growth [And Other Misleading Statements] - By Daniel Rossi-Keen, RiverWise  [PDF of Article]

-- Post-Gazette Editorial: Is There Opportunity For Population Growth In Pittsburgh’s Outlying Counties? [Shell Petrochemical Plant Increases In Jobs, Gross Domestic Product ‘Do Not Yet Appear In The Data’]

-- The Center Square Guest Essay: The Shale Gas Solution, Protecting National Security With Domestic Energy Supply - By Lauren Jessop

-- Broad & Liberty Guest Essay: Natural Gas Pipeline Expansion Touted As Key To US Energy Dominance - By Lauren Jessop

-- PUC Seeking Nominations For PA OneCall Damage Prevention Committee 

-- Bloomberg: A.I.- Driven Demand For Natural Gas Generation Turbines Vastly Outpacing Supply, Threatening World’s Ability To Keep Up With Electricity Demand
[Posted: September 30, 2025] 
PA Environment Digest

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