Skip to Main Content

Department Releases Report on Maryland’s Healthy Soils Program 

Goals Focus on Adoption of Soil Health Practices to Increase On-Farm Resiliency

ANNAPOLIS, MD – The Maryland Department of Agriculture, in collaboration with Maryland’s Soil Health Advisory Committee, has released its recommendations for Maryland’s Healthy Soils Program. The recommendations include strategies to advance adoption of on-farm soil health practices that increase carbon sequestration, improve water quality in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, and increase on-farm profitability. 

“The recommendations included in this report will provide a roadmap for moving Maryland’s Healthy Soils Program forward,” said Secretary Joe Bartenfelder. “The ultimate aim is to promote conservation practices that contribute to healthy, productive soils that can protect crops from extreme weather, reduce erosion and nutrient runoff, and capture and store carbon from the atmosphere.” 

Established in 2017, the Healthy Soil Program is charged with improving the health, yield, and profitability of Maryland soils; increasing biological activity and carbon sequestration capacity; and promoting the use of healthy soils practices. The department established a Soil Health Advisory Committee to provide guidance and support to achieve its goals.

Highlights From the Report

Maryland’s Healthy Soils Program prioritizes the following conservation measures to advance healthy soils:

  • Cover Crops
  • Conservation Tillage (reduced and no-till)
  • Prescribed Grazing
  • Pasture & Hay Planting
  • Conservation Cover
  • Critical Area Planting
  • Conservation Crop Rotation
  • Nutrient Management
  • Integrated Pest Management
  • Agroforestry 

A Healthy Soils Competitive Fund will provide financial assistance for the adoption of healthy soils practices, with a focus on projects and operators that are ineligible for other programs. 

A Cover Crop+ Program focusing on multi-species and extended season cover crops will be introduced to complement the department’s popular existing program.

Read the full report, Maryland’s Healthy Soils Program: A Path Forward, to learn more. For additional information on Maryland’s Healthy Soils Program, please visit the program’s website. For questions regarding the program or the report, please contact Alisha Mulkey at alisha.mulkey@maryland.gov.

# # #

Follow Maryland Department of Agriculture on Twitter @MdAgDept


Contact Information

If you have any questions, need additional information or would like to arrange an interview, please contact:
Jessica Hackett
Director of Communications
Telephone: 410-841-5888

doit-ewspw-W01