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USDA Launches Website to Help Landowners Manage Climate Change Risk

http://www.wlfarm.org
Credit http://www.wlfarm.org

The U.S. Department of Agriculturehas launched a new websitedesigned to provide practical information to farmers, ranchers and landowners dealing with the effects of climate change across the country.

USDA announced its “Climate Hubs” earlier this year. The hubs divide the country into regions, each with distinct challenges posed by the changing climate. And now, the project’s website provides a one-stop shop for tools created by USDA and other agencies to help land managers with climate change-related risk management.

“We want to enable land managers to make wise decisions when it comes to climate-related risk,” said Randy Johnson, who’s the national leader for the Climate Hubs. “That means, ‘How do I handle drought?’ ‘How do I handle extreme events?’ ‘Should I be doing something different now that growing seasons are beginning to change?’”

Right now, the website brings together information and tools created by various agencies that could help land managers with beginning to plan for these changes, Johnson said. Eventually, USDA will develop additional tools to help the process, but for the moment it makes sense to use and aggregate what’s already out there.

“Because this is the first step,” he said. “We have to know where the gaps are. If there’s already a tool that can adequately address a certain vulnerability for a certain crop somewhere, we don’t need to make it again.”

Kentucky is in the Southeast Climate Hub; the USDA estimates the future climate change-related challenges here include different insect pests, changes in precipitation and extreme temperatures.

Copyright 2014 89.3 WFPL News Louisville

Erica reports on environment and energy issues for WFPL, which run the gamut from stories about the region’s biodiversity to coal mine safety and pollution issues. In the name of journalism, she’s gone spelunking, tagged mussels and taste-tested bourbon. Erica moved to Louisville in June 2011 from Charleston, West Virginia, where she worked for the state’s public radio and television affiliate. Besides Kentucky and West Virginia, she’s lived in New Jersey, Minnesota and Illinois. She lives with her husband and son in Louisville.
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