Save ENERGY Save MONEY
Conservation Practices Contribute to Energy Efficiency and Fuel Savings
Farmers and ranchers can cut input costs, maintain production, protect soil and water resources, reduce the nation’s dependence on fossil fuels, and save money by using the conservation practices described on this web site.
Conservation Energy
Estimators

Energy Estimator: Animal Housing
Energy
Estimator: Irrigation Energy Estimator:
Nitrogen
Energy Estimator: Tillage
Ag Propane Cost Estimator (AgWeb.com)
Conservation Practices that Save
Feature Articles
It All Adds Up to
Significant National Energy Savings
- Producers with animal feeding
operations can save up to 250 million annually nationwide by regularly
maintaining their ventilation and heating systems and using more
energy-efficient fixtures and equipment for animal housing.
- Converting irrigation systems from medium or high pressure to low
pressure could cut energy costs by up to $100 million annually.
- Improving water efficiency by just 10 percent could reduce diesel
consumption by 27 million gallons and save farmers and ranchers $55 million
annually.
- Doubling the amount of no-till acreage (from 62 million acres to 124
million acres) could save farmers and ranchers an additional 217 million
gallons of diesel fuel per year, valued at about $500 million annually.
- Doubling the application of manure-based nitrogen to replace fertilizer
produced from natural gas could save $825 million and 100 billion of cubic
feet of natural gas annually.
- Reducing application overlap on 250 million acres of cropland could save
up to $825 million in fertilizer and pesticide costs annually.
USDA Energy Fact Sheet
en Español
USDA Energy Web Page
< Back to Technical Resources
|