| |   |  The Rise of the Carbon Farmer
      Farmers around the world are reigniting the less intensive  agricultural practices of yesteryear—to improve soil health, raise yields, and  trap carbon in the atmosphere back down in the soil.
      Patrick Holden strolls across the field, pausing from time to time to bend  and point out a bumblebee, or a white butterfly, or a dung beetle. A wide  expanse of blue sky stretches above. Beneath, undulating green hills, sprawling  hedgerows, a horizon broken only by the jagged tips of Wales’  Cambrian mountain range. Sun-soaked goodness.
      “Can you see that bumblebee working the clover?” he asks,  voice breathy with exertion. “The bird life, insects, butterflies, small  mammals, and bats ... the biodiversity of this place is unbelievable.” This is  all here, he says, because he’s farming in harmony with nature.
      The secret to this small oasis, Holden says, is the way he  works his land. He is one of a growing number of farmers shaking off  conventional methods and harnessing practices to rebuild soil health and  fertility—cover crops, minimal tilling, managed grazing, diverse crop  rotations. It is a reverse revolution in some ways, taking farming back to what  it once was, when yield was not king, industrialization not the norm, and small  farms dabbled in many things rather than specializing in one.
      Holden’s main crops are oats and peas, sown in rotation with  grassland to build soil fertility. These are then turned into a “muesli” used  as additional feed for his grass-fed cattle and his pigs. The pigs’ manure  fertilizes the land. The glossy Ayrshire cows are milked and the milk curdled  into the farm’s award-winning cheddar cheese. Woven through everything is the  intention to work with and mimic nature.
      The purported benefits are profound: Healthy soil retains  water and nutrients, supports biodiversity, reduces erosion, and produces  nutritious food. But there’s one other, critical gain in our rapidly warming  world: these farming methods suck carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere and  store it back in the soil. As well as making cheese, Holden, with his  regenerative practices, farms carbon.
      Soil is second only to the ocean in its carbon-absorbing  capacity—it  holds  more than the atmosphere and all the planet’s plants and forests combined.  But centuries of damaging, industrialized agriculture have left the earth  depleted and spewed ton of CO2 into the ether.
       According to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization,  many cultivated soils have lost 50 to 70 percent of their original carbon.  By  some counts, a third of the excess CO2 in the atmosphere started  life in the soil, having been released not by burning fossil fuels but by  changing how the planet’s land is used.
      “People ask, ‘Where is the excess carbon coming from?’ It’s  where we’ve destroyed the soil,” says Elaine Ingham, an American soil  microbiologist and the founder of Soil Food Web, an organization that teaches  growers how to regenerate their soil. “Every time you till, you lose 50 percent  of  soil organic matter,” she says, referring to the compounds  that lock carbon into the earth.
      Exactly how much carbon soils can hold isn’t agreed on, and  estimates vary widely on the potential impact of regenerative farming. For  instance, the  Rodale Institute, a regenerative agriculture nonprofit, has  looked at peer-reviewed research and agronomists’ observations and concluded  that regenerative agriculture, if adopted globally, could sequester 100 percent  of annual carbon emissions.
      Other experts are more cautious in their predictions. “It’s  very difficult to know for sure what’s possible in principle as well as what’s  possible in practice,” says John Crawford, a professor of strategy and  technology at Glasgow University  in the UK and  the lead of the Global Soil Health Program. “What is affordable? What kind of  incentives would be required to enable farmers to farm in this way? There are a  whole bunch of uncertainties.”
      Nevertheless, Crawford thinks regenerative agriculture could  have a big impact if widely applied. “It’s been estimated that around 20  percent of current global emissions would be very hard to abate,” he says,  referring to things like heavy industry and aviation where decarbonization with  renewable energy isn’t a straightforward option. He reckons better strategies  for working the world’s soil could mitigate about half of these  hard-to-eradicate emissions.
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