Farmers Protection Act.
Prohibits banks from denying or restricting services to farmers based on ESG or greenhouse‑gas factors, requiring financial decisions be demonstrably based on financial considerati
Prohibits banks from denying or restricting services to farmers based on ESG or greenhouse‑gas factors, requiring financial decisions be demonstrably based on financial considerati
Status: Introduced; withdrawn from committee (per legislative record)
Purpose
- To prohibit financial institutions from denying, restricting, or cancelling banking or lending services to farmers and other agriculture producers on the basis of certain environmental, social, or governance (ESG)-related factors. The bill is intended to protect agricultural borrowers from financing decisions tied to greenhouse‑gas emissions or use of conventional (fossil‑fuel) farm inputs and equipment.
Key definitions
- Agriculture producer: a person engaged in growing crops or livestock production.
- ESG commitment: a bank’s decision to join or otherwise commit to an initiative or organization whose purpose is to promote environmental, social, or political/governance goals (wording varies slightly across versions).
Main provisions
- Prohibition: It is unlawful for a bank to deny, restrict, or cancel a service to an agriculture producer based, in whole or in part, on the producer’s greenhouse‑gas emissions, use of fossil‑fuel‑derived fertilizer, or use of fossil‑fuel‑powered machinery.
- ESG presumption: If a bank has any ESG commitment related to agriculture, a rebuttable presumption arises that a denial/restriction/cancellation of service violates the law. The bank may overcome the presumption by demonstrating—by a preponderance of the evidence—that the action was based solely on documented financial considerations.
- Enforcement and remedies: Either the banking Commissioner (or equivalent regulator) or an agriculture producer may bring a civil action seeking injunction or civil penalties. A court may assess civil penalties up to $10,000 per violation. Net proceeds from penalties are directed to the State’s Civil Penalty and Forfeiture Fund.
- Scope extended: Parallel provisions are added or referenced to apply the prohibition to State associations, state savings banks, and credit unions (statutory cross‑references amended).
- Effective date: The bill is effective upon becoming law and applies to acts committed on or after that date (consistent with the committee substitute language).
Who is affected
- Protected: agriculture producers (farmers) using conventional inputs and equipment.
- Regulated: banks, state savings & loan associations, savings banks, and credit unions operating in the State.
- Enforcers: the State banking/savings administrators and courts.
Potential impacts and considerations
- Limits financial institutions’ ability to use ESG criteria in credit decisions affecting agriculture, requiring institutions to document financial reasons for denials to rebut the presumption.
- May increase litigation and administrative enforcement actions by producers or regulators seeking penalties or injunctions.
- Could constrain risk‑management or corporate‑policy choices by banks that adopt agriculture‑focused ESG commitments.
- Compliance and defense costs for financial institutions may rise; farmers may gain greater assurance of access to credit tied to traditional production methods.
Notes
- The bill appeared in at least two draft forms; the committee substitute adjusted burden of proof standards and enforcement language. Legislative actions indicate the measure was introduced and later withdrawn from committee.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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