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Other farmers look over the hedge

There is some truth in the view that organ­ic farms are tra­di­tion­al. Farms tra­di­tion­al­ly had more wildlife, more diver­si­ty and more jobs than they do today. And, on each of these counts, research shows that organ­ic farms do much bet­ter than the norm.

As organ­ic farms avoid the indus­tri­al fer­tilis­ers and pes­ti­cides engrained in much farm­ing, they rely on ways to build fer­til­i­ty and con­trol pests and weeds that have seemed irrel­e­vant to those using chem­i­cals. Yet they have not stood still. In 1950, the aver­age UK wheat field yield­ed 2 tonnes per hectare. Today organ­ic wheat yields around 5 tonnes a hectare with the record, set last year, dou­ble that.

Organ­ic farm­ers have pio­neered what has come to be called eco­log­i­cal farm­ing or agroe­col­o­gy – farm­ing in ways that make the most of wildlife and renew­able resources. This includes using nat­ur­al preda­tors to keep pests down, com­post­ing, plant­i­ng com­pan­ion crops, using green manures to fix nitro­gen from the air or draw min­er­als up from the bedrock, and keep­ing ani­mals on pas­ture as much as pos­si­ble, giv­ing them a var­ied diet that is reflect­ed in the high qual­i­ty of their meat or milk.

Farm­ers have been called inno­v­a­tive by tra­di­tion and organ­ic farm­ers exem­pli­fy this. Their needs and pri­or­i­ties have sim­ply been dif­fer­ent. Recent­ly, oth­er farm­ers have start­ed look­ing over the hedge.

UK soils are in cri­sis – some sci­en­tists have even claimed we have only 100 har­vests left in our soil

One rea­son is black grass. This weed is the bane of arable farm­ers as, through heavy her­bi­cide use, it has evolved to resist chem­i­cal attack. Farm­ers with black grass prob­lems want to know how their organ­ic neigh­bours tack­le weeds with­out chem­i­cals.

Sim­i­lar­ly, as antibi­ot­ic-resis­tant infec­tions put pres­sure on dairy, pig and poul­try farm­ers to cut their use of these drugs, some are look­ing to organ­ic sys­tems which rarely use antibi­otics, while being recog­nised by ani­mal char­i­ties as achiev­ing the high­est stan­dards of wel­fare.

Anoth­er prompt is soil. Organ­ic farming’s focus on soil, par­tic­u­lar­ly the microbes, fun­gi and worms that live in it, has been at odds with gen­er­a­tions of agri­cul­tur­al edu­ca­tion telling farm­ers soil is lit­tle more than a con­tain­er for roots and chem­i­cals. This is now chang­ing fast, as UK soils are in cri­sis – some sci­en­tists have even claimed we have only 100 har­vests left in our soil.

The result is that organ­ic farm­ing is increas­ing­ly val­ued as a test bed for all agri­cul­ture. Indeed, as oth­er farm­ers face pres­sure to use few­er resources and chem­i­cal inputs, organ­ic farms look ahead of the game.

Yet it has been a lone­ly busi­ness for those organ­ic inno­va­tors. Most agri­cul­tur­al research goes not into how to farm bet­ter, but upstream, to devel­op new chem­i­cals, drugs, breeds or kit to sell to farm­ers. That may not be the place to find sus­tain­able solu­tions, but it is where gov­ern­ments and investors can make the best return on their invest­ment.

Inno­v­a­tive Farm­ers is a new net­work that aims to cor­rect the bal­ance. It sees many of the best ideas in farm­ing com­ing from farm­ers, and gives them research fund­ing and advice to give their efforts a boost.

Fund­ed by the Prince of Wales’s Char­i­ta­ble Foun­da­tion, which gets its mon­ey when peo­ple buy Duchy Organ­ic prod­ucts in Wait­rose, it helps groups of farm­ers run field labs. More than 50 of these farmer-led research projects have tack­led issues rang­ing from prob­lem weeds to low­er­ing green­house gas emis­sions.

Cru­cial­ly, the net­work brings organ­ic and non-organ­ic farm­ers togeth­er. Both are inno­v­a­tive, but nei­ther yet has all the answers.