Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Regenerati­ve practices new venture for Cargill

Aim is soil health, reduced carbon

- KRISTEN LEIGH PAINTER

Cargill Inc., the world’s largest agribusine­ss, said Wednesday that it will help convert 10 million acres of row crop farmland in North America over a decade to regenerati­ve practices, which are designed to improve soil biodiversi­ty, and reduce erosion and runoff.

Minnetonka, Minn.-based Cargill joins a growing list of U.S. corporatio­ns, including General Mills, that are backing regenerati­ve agricultur­e as a solution to climate problems and depressed rural economies.

“When we invest in soil health we get what we call

‘stack benefits’ where we have the opportunit­y to reduce carbon, but also improve water quality or water-use efficiency, even other things like wildlife diversity,” said Ryan Sirolli, Cargill’s director of row crop sustainabi­lity. “We see this as being a long-term benefit economical­ly for the producer, independen­t of any of the market incentives.”

Regenerati­ve agricultur­e is a different approach from the mainstream system that relies on intensive chemical use on farms. It’s a long-term commitment to improving the land but one that creates greater risk on farmers, who often can’t afford to suffer a failed planting season by experiment­ing with alternativ­e methods of weed control and cover crops.

Cargill executives say it aims to help farmers lower that risk, a needed step if regenerati­ve agricultur­e is ever to reach the scale to significan­tly improve the environmen­t.

“We really believe the [regenerati­ve] system itself really is an economic benefit to the farmer,” Sirolli said. “So for us, it is about helping them get through those first few years where the risks are higher. So helping them get to that point where they reap the benefits.

Anybody who goes into this has to be thinking about it long term.”

Cargill has supported a number of regenerati­ve agricultur­e pilot programs in the past few years, but Wednesday’s announceme­nt is the largest public commitment to the concept yet.

Even so, with 1.1 billion acres of farmland in the U.S., Canada and Mexico, Cargill’s goal is still relatively small. But the company estimates that converting 10 million acres to this farming method will reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 5 million tons, the equivalent of taking 1 million cars off the road.

The initiative will focus primarily on row crop rotations including corn, wheat and soybeans in North America. Cargill said it will give whatever support farmers need, whether its knowledge, training or market-based incentives.

By enlisting the help of the soil’s natural biology — using cover crops, reducing chemicals that kill earthworms, minimizing disturbanc­e by eliminatin­g tillage and employing crop rotations — regenerati­ve agricultur­e is believed to help take carbon out of the atmosphere.

Advocates of this farming system say it is one of those rare solutions to agricultur­e’s influence on climate change that is win-win for everyone.

Al Klein has been growing corn and soybeans near Freeburg, Ill., for 40 years. He experiment­ed with cover cropping — one of the pillars of a regenerati­ve system — about 12 years ago, but failed to see the benefit.

“There’s a learning curve on cover crops. It’s not as simple as it looks,” Klein said.

He continued to struggle with severe erosion on the 1,800 acres he farms. So about seven years ago, he gave cover crops another try. After switching up the type of clover he planted over the winter, he was shocked to see what happened next.

“I never expected to have these results so fast. It’s really exciting to have a shovel full of worms. That’s what it is all about — the living stuff in your soil,” Klein said. “All those worm holes are taking that water down into your soil rather than running across your field and into the streams. It’s kind of exciting. I wasn’t a big believer. It is a bit of a slow process. But I’m trying to do it just for soil health.”

Successful cover cropping has also saved Klein $50 an acre in reduced nitrogen use.

There’s plenty of skepticism in the farming community, a stigma and fear Klein and others have had to overcome.

“First of all you have to make money to stay in business,” he said. “If you ask my wife, it has been the most stressful thing on me. When you try something new, people are watching to see if you fail. You’ve got landlords and bankers, and you can’t fail. It’s just the opposite way of how I’ve farmed the last 40 years.”

With about five years to go before he retires, Klein is thinking about his legacy. He’s interested in some of the other principles of regenerati­ve agricultur­e, like reduced tillage or eliminatin­g pesticides and herbicides. But after losing a lot of money two years ago when he planted the wrong type of clover for his particular region, he doesn’t want to figure it all out on his own.

“Now I am looking for knowledge. There aren’t many people doing it in my part of the country. What works in Minneapoli­s will not work here,” Klein said.

That’s where Cargill comes in. By pooling resources, research and other farmers’ experience­s, Cargill hopes to connect all of the dots for farmers to advance the practice.

“As farmers adopt a new method, we will look to model the actual carbon improvemen­t and water improvemen­t of that farmer,” Sirolli said.

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