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Chimera readability score 70 out of 100, Academic reading level.

ARLINGTON, VA— The Nature Conservancy (TNC) and partners today announced the launch of the Expanding Agroforestry Project (EAP), an effort to help U.S. farmers strengthen their operations, diversify revenue, and improve land health. Eligible producers throughout the 30-state project area are invited to apply for financial and technical support to adopt agroforestry practices—the intentional integration of trees and shrubs with crops and livestock.
Farmers interested in applying or learning more, visit: nature.org/ExpandingAgroforestry. The current application window is June 30 to August 11, 2026.
The Expanding Agroforestry Project is a three-year effort funded through the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Advancing Markets for Producers initiative and led by TNC in collaboration with a network of partners including six regional leads: Hawai‘i ‘Ulu Cooperative, Propagate, Savanna Institute, Tuskegee University, the University of Missouri Center for Agroforestry, and Virginia Tech.
Participating farmers are eligible to receive incentive payments from a $39 million fund. They will also have access to regionally tailored technical assistance and peer learning opportunities with the aim of establishing tens of thousands of acres of new agroforestry plantings. Project partners are also working to strengthen markets for agroforestry products such as nuts, fruits, and timber, as well as livestock raised in pastures with planted trees.
“Farmers are land stewards to the core, and this project is an opportunity to recognize and support their transformative stewardship efforts.” said Graham Savio, agroforestry program manager for TNC’s North America Agriculture Program. “In collaboration with our partners, we want to make it easier for producers to adopt proven stewardship practices by providing the financial support, technical expertise, and market connections they need to succeed.”
Agroforestry is used on less than 2% of U.S. farmland, but millions of acres of working lands are well-suited to support plantings. This project focuses on the near-term opportunity of helping eligible farmers put agroforestry practices to work on their lands today, while building a nationwide model for large-scale adoption in the future. The result: stronger, more resilient farming operations and benefits for soil, water, and wildlife.
"Most farmers already want trees on their land,” said Ethan Steinberg, co-founder and CEO at Propagate, an EAP regional lead. "What’s stopped them is financing and the years before a new planting pays off. This project changes that math, so that growers across the country now have the support to plant with confidence, knowing their land and their livelihood can both come out ahead."

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

The text exhibits the style and specificity of professional press material, grounding its claims in named organizations and specific financial/timeline data, suggesting a high degree of human authorship.

Signals Detected
low severity: Varied sentence length and conversational flow interspersed with formal reporting.
low severity: Presence of specific, contextualized quotes from named individuals (Savio, Steinberg) adds idiosyncratic emphasis.
low severity: Highly specific details regarding funding ($39 million), timelines (June 30 to August 11, 2026), and named organizational partners/regional leads.
low severity: Claims are anchored in verifiable institutional structures (TNC, USDA) which increases external verifiability.
Human Indicators
The inclusion of named quotes and the specific delineation of multi-partner organizations and funding streams suggests human editorial input or direct communication with sources.
The structure balances macro-level goals with specific operational details effectively, avoiding the overly uniform rhythm often seen in pure AI generation.