USDA Releases List of Counties Eligible For Supplemental Coverage Option

Little by little, farmers are getting the information they need to piece together their crop insurance coverage for the coming year.

Latest maps cover corn, soybeans, rice, sorghum, cotton, and barley.

Little by little, farmers are getting the information they need to piece together their crop insurance coverage for the coming year. The USDA yesterday released the list of counties that will be eligible for the new Supplemental Coverage Option (SCO) for corn, soybeans, rice, sorghum, cotton, and barley. (You can see images of the maps here.)

Introduced as part of the Farm Bill, the SCO initiative is intended to provide an additional layer of financial protection beyond a farmer’s primary crop insurance policy when there are crop losses county-wide.

It takes effect with the 2015 crop year.

Along with the Agricultural Risk Coverage (ARC) and Price Loss Coverage (PLC), the SCO program is one of several efforts designed to help farmers manage their financial risk in the absence of direct payments. As farmers evaluate their options, they’ll need to consider what combination of coverage is the best for them; producers who choose the ARC option will not be eligible for the SCO program.

The agency has already released the list of SCO-eligible counties for wheat crops; the deadline for farmers to enroll in the program for their winter wheat is Sept. 30.

AgWeb-Logo crop
Related Stories
Allison Thompson with The Money Farm says the failure was likely position squaring heading into the three day holiday plus markets ran into chart resistance and saw some profit taking.
High-oleic soybeans are helping this Wisconsin dairy turn homegrown feed into lower costs, higher butterfat and greater control over its operation.
Farm Journal’s June Ag Economists’ Monthly Monitor shows a weaker ag economy versus a year ago, but more than 80% expect consistent or better conditions over the next 12 months despite ongoing margin pressure.
Read Next
Virginia’s Mainland Farm is considered America’s oldest continuously farmed land, cultivated since the early 1600s. Today it still produces crops while preserving 400+ years of agricultural and Revolutionary War history.
Get News Daily
Get Market Alerts
Get News & Markets App