Farming News - Six UK Arla farmers to pilot regenerative dairy farming practices
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Six UK Arla farmers to pilot regenerative dairy farming practices
Arla Foods will explore regenerative dairy farming practices on six pilot farms in the UK and create data-driven proof points of their impact on nature and climate. At the same time, the cooperative is activating all its 114 organic Arla farmers in the UK to measure their soil carbon content and register practices that promote biodiversity.
Dairy cooperative Arla Foods is taking two tangible, farmer-led steps to gain more data and knowledge of how dairy farming can help improve soil biology, carbon capture, water quality and biodiversity via regenerative farming methods.
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The first step is to establish a pilot programme created in partnership with regenerative farming experts from FAI farms and other expert organisations. In total, 24 selected pilot farmers across five countries (of which six are in the UK) will be trained and coached to implement various regenerative methods, and their learnings combined with data collection will build knowledge of how regenerative methods can be applied to different dairy farming systems and how they impact climate and nature.
The second step is a commitment from the cooperative’s 916 organic farmers, who are responsible for an annual production of 1,000 million kg of organic milk, the world’s largest organic milk pool. All of Arla’s 114 organic farmers in the UK are part of this commitment.
Starting this year, they will self-assess and register their farm’s biodiversity activities once every year to generate data. In addition to this, they will collect soil samples, which will be analysed by a third party laboratory to establish a baseline for their soil carbon. Furthermore, the organic farmers will guarantee that a number of soil health and biodiversity measures are activated on their farms. They will get access to a lever catalogue including information about how to measure and manage improvements. From 2022, they will also self-assess soil health indicators e.g. testing soil smell, spading ease and earthworm counts.
“As a farmer-owned dairy cooperative, a number of farmers have been exploring regenerative farming methods for some time, and motivated by their enthusiasm, we decided to take a broader approach to this as a cooperative, spearheaded by the organic farmers and a group of pilot farmers,” says member of Arla’s Board of Directors Janne Hansson, who is also Chairman of Arla’s Organic Chairman Council that has led the discussion on how the cooperative can engage in and scale regenerative dairy farming.
Need for definition and data
Regenerative agriculture has been gaining attention from producers, retailers, researchers, and consumers as one of the responses to the twin crises of climate change and biodiversity loss.
While there is a general consensus that improvement of soil health and biodiversity are core elements in regenerative farming, there is no universally agreed definition of the approach. Furthermore, there are very few scientific examples of regenerative methods being implemented on dairy livestock farms in the UK and the rest of Europe that farmers can use as guidance. Arla wants to be part of filling this important data gap, using the experience and knowledge of its farmer owners.
“A central part of why we want to explore regenerative farming is to gain data-driven proof points of using regenerative methods on dairy farms. While we have full attention on reducing our carbon emissions, the positive impact farmers can create as stewards of the land has not yet been thoroughly scientifically proven and we want to secure more science-based knowledge to enable dairy farmers to take the right action for the future,” says Head of Agri Commercial Support in Arla Group, Joanna Lawrence.
24 pilot farmers across five countries
To help explore and define the impact of regenerative dairy farming, 24 Arla farmers from the UK, Sweden, Germany, the Netherlands and Denmark have agreed to be pilot farmers for a period of four years. They are a mix of conventional farmers with both grazed and fully housed systems and organic farmers.
Arla’s own farming experts and external experts from UK-based FAI Farms, a leading research, data and consultancy business within the agri-food sector, will train and coach the 24 pilot farmers to manage their farm regeneratively. The farmers will help gather data and assess various methods to understand what effect they can have on soil health, carbon capture, biodiversity, ecosystem processes, farm profitability, and farmer well-being.
At FAI Farms, Regenerative Agriculture Director Claire Hill is excited to be part of the project and to gain access to data from both the 24 pilot farms and from the soil samples from the 916 organic Arla farms.
“Arla is by far the biggest partner we have on regenerative farming within dairy. Their ambition level is going over and above anything we have seen so far in the industry and there is not a pilot programme out there with this depth. What's really exciting is that we will work with different farmers in different countries each working within a unique farm, and the data we will collect along the way will be so insightful. It can significantly increase our knowledge of what regenerative transition looks like, the challenges and benefits which will help us understand how more farmers can get started on their journey,” says Clare Hill.