Regenerative Agriculture: Difference between revisions

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|poc=Ed Lisle
|poc=Ed Lisle
|authors=Ed Lisle
|authors=Ed Lisle
|blueprint=Rural
|blueprint=Agriculture
|chapter=612
|chapter=612
|sectors=Agriculture
|sectors=Agriculture

Revision as of 15:43, September 19, 2022


Agriculture
Agriculture
Sectors Agriculture
Contact Ed Lisle
Topics
Activities
Region-PA-WV-OH.png Tri-State Region-PA-WV-OH-Food System Project
This project intends to develop and implement a plan to increase the supply of local food available to residents of the Pittsburgh food shed (200 mile radius) in several states. By using a data-driven strategic plan as a guide, it envisions a series of targeted interventions to increase the number of producers, add to the variety of the local food inventory, create and enhance aggregation entities to the distribution system, reduce choke-points in supply chains, expand the number of distribution opportunities, and organize consumer demand in ways that improve the equitability of the food system.
Whin-homepage.jpg Wabash Heartland Innovation Network - Advancing Agriculture and Manufacturing via IoT
The Wabash Heartland Innovation Network (WHIN) is a consortium of 10 counties in north-central Indiana, funded by the Lilly Endowment, devoted to working together to fuel prosperity by harnessing the power of internet-enabled sensors to develop our region into a global epicenter of digital agricultural and next-generation manufacturing.

Press
IndoorFarm.jpg Walmart has taken a stake in agriculture startup Plenty
Walmart as taken a stake in agriculture startup Plenty, becoming the first large U.S. retailer to significantly invest in indoor vertical farming as a way to deliver fresher produce to its stores.
Authors

Edlisle.jpeg

Regenerative agriculture is a holistic approach to agriculture that focuses on the interconnection of farming systems and the ecological system as a whole. The concept of regenerative farming is not new. It was used by Indigenous communities centuries ago, long before industrial agriculture occurred.

The top five principles of regenerative agriculture

While there are many types of regenerative farms, they all seek to follow these five principles.

  1. Minimizing soil disturbances: Regenerative agriculture uses farming practices such as limited or no-tilling that minimize physical, biological, and chemical soil disturbances.
  2. Soil coverage. Instead of relying on tilling, regenerative farming practices focus on keeping the soil covered with vegetation and natural materials through mulching, cover crops, and pastures.
  3. Increased plant diversity: Diversity is an essential component in building healthy soils that retain excess water and nutrients. It can help farmers obtain revenue from other sources and it's beneficial to other wildlife and pollinators.
  4. Keeping living roots in the soil as much as possible. Having living roots in the soil ensures that fields are never bare. It can be done by farming practices such as planting winter cover crops or having land in permanent pasture. Keeping living roots in the soil helps stabilize the soil, retaining excess water and nutrient runoff.
  5. Integrate animals into the farm as much as possible. Manure produced by livestock can add valuable nutrients to the soil, reducing the need for fertilizers, and increasing soil organic matter. Healthy soils capture large amounts of carbon and water and reduce the amount of polluted runoff.