POST (Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology)
Printable version

Regenerative agriculture

This POSTnote describes regenerative agriculture, the evidence for beneficial outcomes, and outlines the challenges and opportunities for its wider adoption.

Documents to download

DOI: https://doi.org/10.58248/PN748 

  • UK food production is affected by degraded soils and extreme weather events. These issues are projected to worsen without changes in practice.  
  • Regenerative agriculture is a farmer-led movement that aims to work with nature to improve soil health, biodiversity and water quality while maintaining food production and improving resilience to climate change impacts.  
  • Regenerative agriculture lacks an agreed universal definition. How it is interpreted and implemented varies across different stakeholders and farming systems. Evidence suggests that regenerative agriculture can help to improve farmland biodiversity, soil health and water quality, but improvements may be limited by the context in which different practices are applied.  
  • While regenerative agriculture can have positive effects on farmland biodiversity, it may have environmental trade-offs, such as using chemicals as an alternative to ploughing to manage weeds. Potential effects on yields in the short to medium term may occur in some contexts but are less likely when multiple practices are implemented in combination.  
  • At the farm level, risks arising from transitioning to regenerative agricultural practices are partially mitigated by reduced overall spending on chemical inputs and fuel. Interventions across food systems, such as independent knowledge exchange, peer-to-peer learning, local infrastructure and help to access new markets may support successful implementation in the UK. 
  • Defra states it does not currently intend to subsidise regenerative agriculture.

Documents to download

 

Channel website: https://www.parliament.uk/post

Original article link: https://post.parliament.uk/research-briefings/post-pn-0748/

Share this article
Academic Fellowships Upcoming work POST Publications

The Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology (POST) is Parliament’s in-house source of scientific advice.

 

Latest News from
POST (Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology)

Quick-fire Survey: Share Your Insights on External File Sharing & Collaboration