§ 9011.
(8)
Effective reference price
The term “effective reference price”, with respect to a covered commodity for a crop year, means the lesser of the following:
(A)
An amount equal to 115 percent of the reference price for such covered commodity.
(B)
An amount equal to the greater of—
(i)
the reference price for such covered commodity; or
(ii)
85 percent of the average of the marketing year average price of the covered commodity for the most recent 5 crop years, excluding each of the crop years with the highest and lowest marketing year average price.
(9)
Extra long staple cotton
The term “extra long staple cotton” means cotton that—
(A)
is produced from pure strain varieties of the Barbadense species or any hybrid of the species, or other similar types of extra long staple cotton, designated by the Secretary, having characteristics needed for various end uses for which United States upland cotton is not suitable and grown in irrigated cotton-growing regions of the United States designated by the Secretary or other areas designated by the Secretary as suitable for the production of the varieties or types; and
(B)
is ginned on a roller-type gin or, if authorized by the Secretary, ginned on another type gin for experimental purposes.
(15)
Payment yield
The term “payment yield”, for a farm for a covered commodity—
(A)
means the yield used to make payments pursuant to section 8714 or 8754 of this title, as in effect on September 30, 2013; or
(19)
Reference price
The term “reference price”, with respect to a covered commodity for a crop year, means the following:
(A)
For wheat, $5.50 per bushel.
(B)
For corn, $3.70 per bushel.
(C)
For grain sorghum, $3.95 per bushel.
(D)
For barley, $4.95 per bushel.
(E)
For oats, $2.40 per bushel.
(F)
For long grain rice, $14.00 per hundredweight.
(G)
For medium grain rice, $14.00 per hundredweight.
(H)
For soybeans, $8.40 per bushel.
(I)
For other oilseeds, $20.15 per hundredweight.
(J)
For peanuts, $535.00 per ton.
(K)
For dry peas, $11.00 per hundredweight.
(L)
For lentils, $19.97 per hundredweight.
(M)
For small chickpeas, $19.04 per hundredweight.
(N)
For large chickpeas, $21.54 per hundredweight.
(O)
For seed cotton, $0.367 per pound.
(23)
Temperate japonica rice
The term “temperate japonica rice” means rice that is grown in high altitudes or temperate regions of high latitudes with cooler climate conditions, in the Western United States, as determined by the Secretary, for the purpose of—
([Pub. L. 113–79, title I, § 1111], Feb. 7, 2014, [128 Stat. 659]; [Pub. L. 115–123, div. F, § 60101(a)(1)]–(3), Feb. 9, 2018, [132 Stat. 308]; [Pub. L. 115–334, title I, § 1101], Dec. 20, 2018, [132 Stat. 4500].)