Inside the New USDA Plans to Entrench Livestock on Public Lands
A new federal “Beef Industry Plan” reveals how the administration intends to expand grazing, weaken oversight, and lock in subsidies that keep cattle on failing western public lands.
Last week, the U.S. Department of Agriculture released a 13-page USDA Beef Industry Plan outlining three priorities: “protecting and improving the business of ranching,” “expanding processing, consumer transparency, and market access,” and “building demand alongside domestic supply.” Neither healthy watersheds, thriving wildlife populations, nor public recreation were not among the priorities, although these are supposed to be equally important under federal multiple-use legislation.
At the heart of the proposal lies the forthcoming USDA–DOI Grazing Action Plan, a joint initiative between the Department of Agriculture and the Department of the Interior. The plan would “streamline and expand grazing on federal lands,” positioning public lands livestock production as a top Trump Administration priority.
The Public Lands Council, the lobbying arm of the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, was quick to take ownership for the policy. In an October 25 email to its members, PLC called the forthcoming Grazing Action Plan “the direct result of PLC’s engagement with DOI and USDA so far this year on monitoring, permitting reform, grazing regulations modernization, depredation verification and management processes, and wildfire mitigation.”
In other words, the livestock industry isn’t just celebrating this plan; it helped write it. And the Administration is quickly trying to pivot to the plans benefits to ranchers after screwing the beef industry by agreeing to allow in four times as much beef from Argentina.
Misleading Metrics: “Rising Demand”
The report begins by stating that the U.S. has lost over 17 percent of cattle ranches, more than 150,000 operations, since 2017, and that the national herd is at a 75-year low even as beef demand has risen about nine percent over the past decade. But that nine-percent figure tells only part of the story. It cherry-picks an unusually short window to obscure a much larger trend.
According to data sourced from the USDA’s own Economic Research Service, per-capita beef consumption in the United States has fallen nearly 30 percent since 1980, from roughly 78 pounds a year per person to about 55 pounds in 2024. The brief uptick between 2015 and 2022, the period USDA cites as evidence of “growing demand,” was a statistical blip in an otherwise steady, decades-long decline.
Even the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association’s own peer-reviewed research corroborates a downward trend. A 2023 study published in Nutrients analyzed 18 years of federal dietary data and found that total per capita beef consumption declined significantly from 2001 to 2018.
Meanwhile, research found that North America wastes more animal flesh per person than any other meat-producing region on Earth. This plan isn’t about efficiency, sustainability, or responding to consumer demand. It’s about propping up overproduction in a system where both domestic consumption and resource efficiency are moving in the opposite direction.
The Myth of Federal Land Ranching Importance
Even as the USDA frames this as a strategy to “build demand,” the numbers show that public lands ranchers barely register on the supply side of the nation’s beef economy.
According to Kauffman et al. (2022), public lands provide approximately 1.6 percent of the forage used for beef production nationwide. University of Wyoming research funded by the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association found that public lands grazing generates between 0.05 and 0.5 percent of state GDP in western states such as Oregon, Idaho, and Wyoming, and just 0.1 percent of regional employment. In other words, this industry’s contribution to the western economy rounds close to zero. But its ecological and political footprint is disproportionate.
Despite its negligible output of beef, public lands ranching continues to receive extraordinary government support. Grazing fees remain fixed at the heavily discounted rate of $1.35 per cow/calf pair, a relic of 1980s politics that covers less than one-tenth the cost of administering the program. In some western states, the federal government spends seven dollars in oversight for every dollar it collects in grazing fees.
Economically, these ranchers are peripheral. But ecologically, they lay waste to vast acreages. And politically, they have an outsized voice.
For every cow-calf pair placed on public land, native wildlife are displaced: one pair consumes forage equivalent to two elk, six mule deer, or ten pronghorns. Across millions of acres, that substitution translates into systematic removal of native herbivores and the predators that depend on them. Public lands livestock operations occupy vast acreages across the West, degrading riparian zones, spreading invasive weeds, and displacing native wildlife. The USDA Beef Industry Plan ignores this imbalance, portraying ranchers as national stewards rather than what they are: a small, federally subsidized minority shaping public-land policy for private gain.
A Subsidy Pipeline Masquerading as Reform
More than 60 percent of BLM and 95 percent of Forest Service grazing allotments have been renewed without environmental analysis under a temporary rider to FLPMA meant to reduce backlogs. Meanwhile, more than 56 million acres of BLM-managed lands fail to meet even the most basic rangeland-health standards, with 37 million acres failing specifically because of livestock grazing. Another 36 million acres haven’t been assessed at all. Rather than addressing these existing failures, the administration proposes to expand grazing into areas currently recovering from it.
The plan doesn’t fix what’s broken, it doubles down.
The plan’s suite of “reforms,” including a “unified permitting framework,” categorical exclusions, and “emergency authorities” to bypass review after droughts or wildfires, is designed to eliminate oversight. It makes it easier to keep cattle on public lands even when those lands are ecologically bankrupt.
To “elevate producer voices,” the document calls for training federal line officers in “practical ranch operations,” embedding ranching liaisons in wildfire response, and expanding “targeted grazing” and “virtual fencing” pilots. These euphemisms disguise a single goal: locking public lands into permanent cattle use and putting ranchers in charge, regardless of environmental cost.
Alongside weakened oversight, the plan layers in new financial guarantees that turn risk into revenue.
Predator Management and ESA Reform
One of the plan’s most consequential sections, “Predator Management and ESA Reform,” directs USDA and Interior to weaken evidentiary standards for compensating ranchers for livestock losses to wolves, bears, and coyotes. It raises coverage levels, speeds payouts, and even adds coverage for unborn livestock.
Changing the standard of proof for predator payouts shifts who writes the rules about what counts as a verified loss—and who benefits when those rules are loosened. The document singles out Arizona and New Mexico—a deliberate signal to Gila-country ranchers who have long pressed for broader lethal control of highly-endangered Mexican wolves, reflecting political pressure rather than science.
The reference to “ESA reform” signals potential changes to how the Endangered Species Act constrains grazing in critical habitats or limits lethal predator control. The details are vague, but the intent is clear: to weaken regulatory safeguards that protect wildlife and water.
The same document that undermines wildlife protections also expands the financial cushions that insulate ranchers from the risks of drought, overuse, and market decline.
Disaster Payments and Drought Subsidies
These shifts build upon and expand the Livestock Indemnity Program (LIP) and Livestock Forage Disaster Program (LFP)—two subsidy pipelines that already funnel billions of taxpayer dollars to ranchers each year. LIP reimburses producers for animals lost to extreme weather or predators “reintroduced by the federal government,” covering up to 100 percent of market value per head, and now proposes to include fetuses as compensable losses.
LFP, designed for temporary drought relief, has quietly become a permanent income stream. In 2023, it paid out $1 billion in taxpayer funds, primarily to ranchers operating in the most arid regions of the West. The USDA Farm Service Agency reported payments averaging $58 per head per month—more than 40 times the federal grazing fee. The USDA Economic Research Service warns that LFP costs could rise by 45 to 135 percent by 2100 as droughts intensify, further shifting financial risk from producers to taxpayers.
Even as rangelands deteriorate, counties receiving LFP payments show no significant reductions in herd size, evidence that the program discourages adaptation and rewards overstocking. Ranchers who graze through droughts keep their payouts, while those who rest their allotments risk losing permits for “non-use.” The result is a perverse incentive structure: the worse the land fares, the more public money flows in.
By layering new subsidies and weaker verification standards onto these programs, the administration is institutionalizing a model where ranchers are paid to persist in unsustainable landscapes. It’s not disaster relief—it’s a guaranteed revenue stream for failure, underwritten by the public while the land, water, and wildlife absorb the cost.
Rewriting Reality: “Vacant” Allotments
The white paper claims that the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management oversee about 240 million acres of federal rangeland across 28 states, divided into roughly 29,000 grazing allotments. It asserts that ten percent, about 24 million acres, are “vacant.”
There is no credible evidence that 24 million acres of authorized grazing allotments are sitting empty. The agencies’ own data show far fewer genuinely “vacant” allotments, and many of those are vacant precisely because they’ve been closed for ecological recovery, conflict with other land designations, or permanently retired through voluntary buyouts.
Many so-called “vacant” allotments were retired through conservation purchases to resolve longstanding conflicts with bighorn sheep, wolves, and grizzly bears. These landscapes have since shown measurable recovery of vegetation and wildlife habitat, offering rare scientific baselines for comparison. Re-stocking them would erase decades of ecological progress and degrade wilderness character where livestock haven’t grazed in years.
What USDA appears to be doing is inflating the figure by counting closed, decommissioned, or temporarily rested allotments as if they were available for new grazing. In other words, it’s redefining “vacant” to mean “anything not currently grazed,” regardless of legal or ecological status.
Many of these areas include national monuments, wilderness, or critical wildlife habitat, places intentionally protected from livestock use. Folding those closures into a national grazing “expansion” target isn’t an accounting error; it’s propaganda.
And when the plan pledges to “ensure no net loss of Animal Unit Months nationwide,” it cements that distortion into policy, treating every acre ever grazed as permanently available for livestock, no matter its current condition or legal status.
Reopening “vacant” allotments under this false pretense would violate both science and law. It’s not about land stewardship. It’s about manufacturing a crisis to justify reopening lands that were closed for good reason.
The Real Bottom Line
Public lands ranchers are not the backbone of the beef industry; they aren’t even a rib. They’re a federally subsidized romanticized relic of the operations that is actually putting red meat on America’s tables. . Their economic footprint is minuscule, but their environmental impact is enormous. This plan would codify that imbalance, turning America’s most ecologically fragile landscapes into permanent feedlots.
Beyond the ecological and fiscal damage, this plan represents a profound democratic failure. It formalizes a landlord-tenant relationship between the federal government and a small, politically connected class of ranchers, transforming citizens’ public lands into a private subsidy pipeline.
The USDA Beef Industry Plan isn’t about “fortifying” ranching; it’s about fortifying dependence. It’s an attempt to rewrite land management around the myth that public lands ranching is vital to national food security, when in truth it’s a drain on both the land and the public treasury.
For decades, taxpayers have financed a myth. This plan doesn’t fix that problem; it institutionalizes it.
Grace Kuhn is the digital director for Western Watersheds Project, grace@westernwatersheds.org









So shameful. This is discouraging.