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Municipal Carbon Field Guide Launched by LandConnect -- New Revenue Streams for Cities Managing Vacant Land
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2026 Municipal Carbon Field Guide by LandConnect Service Area Mapper St Louis Service Area Mapper Kansas City LandConnect: Powered by GRŌ
The platform offers a research-backed roadmap to transform underutilized properties into economic assets.

ST. LOUIS - Washingtoner -- LandConnect, a GRO:FARM initiative, today announced the release of its Municipal Carbon Field Guide & Toolkit, a comprehensive resource for leaders to convert underutilized land into revenue-generating offset projects while revitalizing neighborhoods.

The guide addresses a challenge facing cities nationwide: how to manage thousands of vacant properties that drain municipal budgets through maintenance costs while offering no return. LandConnect integrates USDA conservation programs with voluntary carbon markets, creating "a triple win for municipalities, communities, and the environment."

"Across the pilot region alone, we've identified over 12,000 vacant and underutilized parcels," said the LandConnect team. "What if the same properties that cost cities money could generate revenue, increase surrounding property values, and provide measurable environmental benefits? That's exactly what LandConnect delivers."

Research-Backed Benefits

The guide presents financial projections grounded in research, including:
  • Property tax recovery: 8-15% increases in adjacent property values within 3 years of vacant lot greening -- significant new tax revenue
  • Stormwater savings: $800-$1,200 per greened acre annually in avoided infrastructure costs
  • Maintenance cost reduction: $150-$650 per parcel annually compared to mowing and debris removal
  • Carbon credit revenue: $73,500-$147,000 annually for a city enrolling 500 parcels at current rates
  • Federal cost-share funding: USDA NRCS programs can cover 50-75% of implementation costs
Enrolling just 100 parcels could experience benefits exceeding $1.19 million over five years, according to the financial modeling.

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Leveraging Federal Conservation Programs

A key innovation of LandConnect's approach is integrating with established USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) programs, including the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP), and Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP).

"The NRCS has decades of experience funding conservation practices that sequester carbon—tree planting, native prairie establishment, wetland restoration," the guide explains. "We've connected those proven practices to the voluntary carbon market, creating an additional revenue stream that complements federal support."

The 2018 Farm Bill explicitly expanded NRCS program eligibility to urban areas, making cities eligible for the funding historically available to farmers and ranchers.

Addressing Environmental Justice


The Field Guide emphasizes sustainability, noting that vacant land disproportionately concentrates in disinvested neighborhoods. Community benefits documented in the guide include:
  • 22% reduction in depression symptoms near greened spaces
  • 29% reduction in gun violence near greened vacant lots
  • 2-5°F decrease in heat island effect
  • 40-60% increase in pollinator diversity
  • Workforce development with  60% hiring from project neighborhoods
St. Louis Metro Case Studies

The guide features 4 call-to-action detailed case studies from the St. Louis region:
  • Wells-Goodfellow: 200-parcel potential generating $130,000+ in annual property tax recovery
  • East St. Louis: Hybrid model combining conservation and urban agriculture
  • Ferguson: Green infrastructure addressing stormwater challenges in the watershed
  • Small Municipality Aggregation: Regional partnership model for cities like Pagedale and Velda City
Getting Started in 90 Days

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The toolkit offers a step-by-step enrollment process to move from consultation to program launch within 90 days, including:
  1. No-cost assessment of land inventory
  2. NRCS program application assistance
  3. Community engagement planning
  4. Transparent revenue sharing
  5. Launch with local workforce development
"We handle all the technical complexity—soil carbon measurement, carbon registry enrollment, third-party verification, market transactions," the team noted. "Cities need only designate a point of contact and provide site access. We estimate 4-8 hours per month of staff time for an active program."

Immediate Availability

The LandConnect Municipal Carbon Field Guide & Toolkit is available for immediate download at landconnect.mygro.co. The platform is actively recruiting municipal partners and responds to all inquiries within 48 hours.

Cities interested in exploring enrollment can request a no-obligation carbon potential assessment by contacting info@mygro.co.

About LandConnect

LandConnect is a GRO:FARM initiative that connects landowners, municipalities, and conservation programs with voluntary carbon markets. The platform aggregates small-parcel carbon projects to achieve the scale needed for cost-effective verification and market access. Developed with the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, LandConnect focuses on urban and peri-urban conservation that delivers measurable environmental, social, and economic co-benefits.

For more information, visit landconnect.mygro.co.

Media Contact:
LandConnect Municipal Partnerships Email: info@mygro.co

Contact
Municipal Partnerships Team
***@mygro.co


Source: GRŌ:FARM

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