Agricultural Conservation Program


The Agricultural Conservation Program was a United States government program administered by the Farm Service Agency. It was the first conservation cost-sharing program, established by Congress in 1936 in the Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act. The ACP and paid farmers up to $3,500 per year as an incentive to install approved practices for soil conservation and to protect water quality.
The ACP was terminated in the 1996 farm bill and replaced by a new Environmental Quality Incentives Program.