Farming News - Yara UK joins forces with Branston to cut carbon in potato crops

Yara UK joins forces with Branston to cut carbon in potato crops

  • Yara has announced a new partnership with Branston, one of the UK's leading suppliers of potatoes and the growers for Tesco Finest white potatoes.
  • As part of the initiative, Yara will provide Branston with lower carbon fertilisers as well as crop nutrition support to reduce carbon footprint and improve yield. 
  • The initiative amounts to a proof-of-concept project for Yara and will be trialed at the Branston farm in Lincolnshire. 

 

Yara's mission to decarbonise food production continues with the announcement of a new partnership with Branston, one of the UK's leading suppliers of potatoes. As part of the joint initiative, Yara will supply Branston, the potato growers for Tesco Finest white potatoes, with a Lower Carbon Crop Nutrition Program to reduce the carbon footprint of the end product.  

Already a buyer of Yara's liquid and solid fertiliser products, Branston's commitment to achieving long-term sustainability led to discussions around how Yara could help them lower their carbon footprint, with lower carbon fertilisers. 

YaraMila, YaraBela and YaraLiva have been lower carbon since 2006 when Yara introduced state-of-the-art abatement technology to reduce nitrous oxide emissions. However, this is only part of the picture. Alongside supplying fertiliser products, Yara will provide Branston with comprehensive potato crop nutrition support focusing on whole plant health to improve yield. This will involve carrying out soil and leaf testing at its Lancrop Laboratories to assess NUE and identify nutrient deficiencies and providing micronutrient products from the YaraVita range to ensure crops have everything they need. 

The initiative amounts to a proof-of-concept project for Yara, aimed at gathering data to demonstrate to Branston and Tesco just how much of a carbon reduction is possible with its lower carbon fertilisers. Included in this data will be verification statements which will show the carbon footprint reduction of the products supplied.

"Introducing this holistic crop nutrition program approach will positively impact the potato crop at Branston's by lowering carbon footprints whilst maintaining or increasing yields. Yara fertilisers have been independently verified since 2006 and now include the new Climate Choice Low Carbon grades. These lower carbon  fertilisers will be included as part of the Crop Nutrition Plan will inevitably help both Branston and Tesco reduce their carbon footprint even further," says Gareth Flockhart, Key Account Manager for Yara UK. "Our hope is that through this initiative, we can demonstrate that by making the switch to lower carbon fertilisers is the way to a more sustainable food system for the future." 

The initiative will be trialed on the Branston Farm in Lincolnshire, a hub of regenerative agriculture, and it's hoped that it will be rolled out to the company's external growers in the near future. 

"Yara have done some great work in developing a number of genuinely low carbon fertiliser products that should offer potato growers the same storability, handleability and nutrient uptake that they are used to from conventional products.  We hope that over time, innovative products such as these will be incorporated into our recipe for low carbon (or even Net Zero) potato production," says Mark Willcox, Agronomy Director, Branston Ltd.