American Farmland Trust was founded in 1980 to save America’s farms and ranches. Now, AFT leads the conservation agriculture movement with a mission to save America’s farms and ranches by protecting agricultural land, promoting sound farming practices, and helping farm families stay on the land. AFT takes a holistic approach, recognizing the vital connection between the land itself, the practices employed on that land, and the farmers and ranchers who steward that land. Through on-the-ground projects, objective research, and effective advocacy, AFT addresses major challenges facing farmers and ranchers, positioning farming to serve both economic and environmental goals. The widely recognized No Farms No Food® message AFT crafted highlights the importance of farmland, connecting the food we eat to the farms that grow it.
AFT's efforts have saved millions of acres of farmland from development and supported tens of thousands of farmers in adopting sustainable practices. Despite these successes, the challenges are urgent: every day, 2,000 acres of farmland are lost to non-agricultural uses, many farms continue to lose topsoil at alarming rates; and one-third of America’s farmland may change hands in the next 15 years as aging landowners sell their properties. These trends jeopardize the future of agriculture and our environment. Farmland is essential for food production—the demand for which is expected to increase by 60% by 2050. But farmland is also essential for a wide array of ecosystem services on which our future depends.
The Farmland Information Center is a clearinghouse for information about farmland protection and stewardship. It is a partnership between the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service and American Farmland Trust, authorized by the federal Farmland Protection Policy Act. Our team has more than 80 years of combined experience in providing reliable, accurate information to help save our nation’s farmland and ranchland. The Farmland Information Center acts as the library liason between AFT and the International Environmental Library Consortium.
The Agriculture Network Information Collaborative (AgNIC) is a partnership of institutions who voluntarily collaborate in the area of agricultural information and data management.
The International Environment Library Consortium is a cooperative licensing partnership that provides access to an array of resources in environment, ecology, wildlife, natural resources, business, and economics subjects and makes these resources from major publishers affordable at the not-for-profit scale.