USDA Deputy Under Secretary Gloria Montaño Greene Speaks in Perry-Paige Auditorium

March 01, 2023
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USDA Deputy Under Secretary Gloria Montaño Greene discusses tHe Climate-Smart Agriculture effort at FAMU

Florida A&M University (FAMU) has received three grants totaling $15 million from the U.S. Department of Agriculture as part of the Partnership for Climate-Smart Agriculture and Forestry Program.

On Wednesday, February 8, Gloria Montaño Greene, deputy under secretary of farm production and conservation, spoke in front of a crowd of university leaders, faculty, staff, students, partnering agencies and farming producers in FAMU’s Perry-Paige Auditorium, to discuss the partnership and to recognize the investigative efforts of three FAMU researchers, whose grant projects have been selected to receive funding to support climate-smart practices.

“We’re excited to celebrate what this wonderful investment means, and not just for Florida A&M University, but also for the development and strengthening of agriculture in making it more centered in some of the spaces it has not been previously.” said Montaño Greene. “Understanding the pipeline and the direction of how we’re moving forward with agriculture will help us to serve  better, learn from the past, and will impact how we think and prepare, so we really thank you for this partnership.”

Montaño Greene, who was appointed by the Biden-Harris administration in 2021, said the decision to develop the grant opportunity came because of persistent feedback from the public. “It was about a year ago today, that the Secretary of Agriculture announced this opportunity for climate imprint” she said.  “We decided to create this funding opportunity in response to the constant theme of concerns and problems we heard from consumers wanting to know what agriculture is doing to mitigate or address climate change. There was a need to figure out how to do something different.”

The University of Arizona alum said the design of the grant application was developed specifically with the intent to ensure partnerships would be inclusive of rural and underserved communities. “We put in there the expectation, that there was collaboration for partners that were used to serving underserved communities and that they had to consider it as part of their plan. This was something we weighed into the scoring.”

The Arizona native said growing up in a rural community gave her first-hand knowledge about the impacts of agriculture and the importance of investing in communities. “For many of us, it is our generational normal to have farming, agriculture, and to live in an area where the closest corner store is a 45-minute drive away and the closest grocery store is an hour and a half away. For me, that was my normal.”

For this partnership, FAMU principal investigators will carry out fundamental research in climate-smart practices over the next five years, that will expand markets for climate-smart commodities, leverage the greenhouse gas benefits of climate-smart commodity production and provide economically viable climate-smart cropping options for small and underserved producers, ultimately benefiting the environment, agriculturalists, and manufacturing sectors.

During the three-hour event, each principal investigator highlighted details about their respective projects.

IMAGE(From Right)Juzhong Tan, Ph.D. FAMU assistant professor, Gloria Montaño Greene, USDA deputy undersecretary, Odemari Mbuya, Ph.D. FAMU professor and director of the FAMU Center for Water Resources,and Jennifer Taylor, Ph.D. FAMU associate professor.

Odemari Mbuya, Ph.D., an agricultural sciences professor and director of the FAMU Center for Water Resources, has been awarded $4.9 million and will serve as principal investigator, focusing on research that will improve the carbon sink, by encouraging small and underserved farmers in the southeastern U.S., specifically Florida, Alabama, and Louisiana, to plant industrial hemp, a crop with high carbon sequestration efficiency and a climate-smart commodity crop. 

Juzhong Tan, Ph.D., an assistant professor, received $4.8 million to investigate the development of biochar-based climate-smart practices and technologies that may be implemented on farms, especially on those which are underserved, and to market the resulting climate-smart commodities.

Jennifer Taylor, Ph.D., an associate professor, was awarded $4.9 million and will lead investigations to advance equity by minimizing transaction costs and addressing cultural dynamics for Black and indigenous producers by using a farmer-to-farmer collaborative training approach.

“We understand the importance of the work that we do in agriculture and want to continue our efforts to emphasize that, which is why FAMU is proud to uphold the mission of the USDA”, said Allyson L. Watson, Ph.D., interim provost and vice president for the Division of Academic Affairs. “We know that America’s commodities produced using climate-smart practices are important as we move forward in this nation. This work allows FAMU, as an 1890 land-grant institution, to continue to focus on our work with small and underserved producers.”

IMAGEFAMU leaders, staff, university stakeholders, USDA representatives, and farmers in attendance for USDA Deputy Under Secretary Gloria Montaño Greene visit to discuss climate-smart initiative.

imageCAFS's USDA 1890 Scholars, administration and faculty among those in attendance during USDA Deputy Secretary Gloria Montaño Greene visit to FAMU

In addition to each project leads core team, FAMU graduate students will be selected, recruited, and trained to assist with the research projects as part of their thesis. 

Following presentations made by each principal investigator, Montaño Greene facilitated a question-and-answer discussion with students on issues impacting the agricultural sector, then participated in a brief tour of FAMU’s campus.

“Florida A&M University has shown up in all areas…the science, the research and the capacity”, Montaño Greene said.  “You guys have also shown up indirectly, by asking how can we support the next generation of agriculture to be a part of this effort. Congratulations on almost $15 million on these projects. You are small, yet powerful, and moving mountains with what you have in order to make influences, and ripple effects for generations.”

The grant is part of a $325 million federal investment in 71 projects under the second funding pool of the Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities effort. In total, the investment from both funding pools is more than $3.1 billion for 141 tentatively selected projects, which includes over 30 minority-serving institutions and groups dedicated to working with small and underserved producers.  

A complete list of projects is available at usda.gov/climate-smart-commodities. For more information about USDA resources supporting farmers and ranchers in producing climate solutions, visit farmers.gov/climate-smart .