Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions at Farm Level The Go-To Guide

Practical, easy-to-use guidance to help farmers reduce their greenhouse gas footprint

Funders: 
WWF/Tesco partnership
Organisation: 
Produced by Innovation for Agriculture in association with Eunomia Research and Consulting on behalf of the WWF/Tesco partnership
Date: 
January 2022
Copyright: 
Creative Commons Licence
Evidence: 
Applied research
Key Farming Practices: 
Organic fertilisers
Soil monitoring
Minimum Tillage
Diverse leys
Cover crops
Green manures
Leys

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Resource explained: 

This guide is for UK farmers, growers and land managers looking to start their journey to reducing Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions at farm level. Using ‘swing-o-meters’ to demonstrate the impact on both GHG emissions and potential cost benefit of each action, the guide is a useful resource to access the most suitable actions for your specific enterprise. Produced by the Innovation for Agriculture charity, the guidance in the booklet is independent and without industry bias. It outlines nineteen actions identified as having the greatest potential to reduce GHG emissions - providing useful information for each on practical recommendations to help you implement along with environmental and economic benefits, and includes other useful reference links throughout.

Findings & recommendations: 

The actions presented in the guide were discussed with a group of farmers from across the UK to ‘sense-check’ the science. Experiences from those already implementing changes on farm have informed the guide to make it as relevant and practical as possible.

The list of actions covered relate to: Cover/catch crops, integrating grass leys and grain legumes in arable rotations, keeping soil pH at optimum level for plant growth, minimum tillage cultivations, precision fertiliser applications and avoiding excess nitrogen, enhanced efficiency fertilisers, manure management, waste management, livestock diets, breeding and health, farm machinery, and reducing on-farm food waste.

It can be concluded that there is no single silver bullet to reduce GHG emissions significantly. A whole farm approach which selects multiple actions suitable to the specific enterprise will have the biggest impact and longevity.

Summary provided by: 
Martha Hayes