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Improving soils by building soil organic matter is a win, win situation for everyone.

Good soil management is central to sustainable farming everywhere. Healthy soils are any nation’s greatest asset and, if well managed, can go on producing food, fibre and fuel for generation after generation. However much UK farmland is badly degraded, following farming practices that have not looked after the soil, effectively raiding the ‘soil capital bank’.

Fortunately soils have an extraordinary capacity to regenerate quickly and become productive and stable again.

Healthy soils have numerous benefits for the farmer and society:

  • Stable and resilient
  • Resistant to erosion due to stable and improved soil structure. This leads to improved water quality in groundwater and surface waters, and ultimately to increased food security and decreased negative impacts to ecosystems.
  • Easily workable in cultivated systems
  • Good habitat for soil micro-organisms
  • Fertile and good structure
  • Large carbon sinks

Basic Principles to Create Healthy Soils:

Cultivation can reduce soil structure and oxidise carbon, which is then released to the atmosphere. Minimising cultivation frequency and depth alongside ensuring the soil is not too wet when cultivated can reduce the damage arising from incorrect management.

Perennial crops (including grasses) are good for soil because they encourage organic matter formation:

  • Diverse cropping systems (cultivated and grassland) introduce vegetative variety into soils which stimulates soil biology
  • Evaluate machinery operations: minimise depth, frequency and proportion of soil inverted if avoidable
  • Build soil organic matter as much and as frequently as possible!

The Importance of Soil Organic Matter

Healthy soils support a large and diverse microbial community, the interactions between species and niches increases soil functionality to decompose residues and stabilise organic matter. Previously degraded soils that become more sympathetically managed will tend to increase in soil organic matter content at the fastest rates, however, all soils can continue to build organic matter as the depth of high carbon content in the soil increases.

Building soil organic matter is a holy grail for the farmer or grower and is also a win, win situation:

  • Healthy soils produce healthy crops
  • Crops growing in healthy soils give higher yields and higher profits
  • Soils high in organic matter are resilient, stable and have good structure
  • Carbon sequestration rates can be huge

Work completed by the FCT has demonstrated that every hectare of land that raises its soil organic matter levels by just 0.1% (e.g. 4.2% to 4.3%) can sequester approximately 8.9 tonnes of CO2e per year (at 1.4 g/cm3 bulk density). This is an extraordinary figure; in practice that is not only possible but being exceeded by farmers and growers building healthy soils.

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Opportunities are increasing for farmers and land managers to earn revenues from storing carbon in soils or vegetation, or by reducing baseline GHG emissions from crop and livestock production.

Soil is an essential natural resource for all farmers. Over recent years many initiatives have sought to provide information and advice on soils and Soil Health, notably AHDB Great Soils. 

The intricate web of relationships between physical, chemical and biological soil components underpins crop and livestock health and productivity.

The Farm Carbon Toolkit was created by farmers for farmers. For over a decade, we’ve worked to further the understanding of greenhouse gas emissions in agriculture. We provide tools and services to measure impact and run projects with farmers that inspire action on the ground. Our vision is a farming sector that minimises its carbon emissions and maximises its carbon sequestration, whilst producing quality food and a wide range of public goods, all produced by resilient and profitable farm businesses. Some people call this vision a regenerative farming future.  

There is a lot of interest in soil carbon currently, due to the opportunity to store and sequester carbon in soil. It is also vital for soil health, forming part of soil organic matter.

Soil biology includes a variety of soil microbes, bacteria and larger fauna such as earthworms and collembolans.

Soil organic matter (OM) is all living or once-living materials in the soil.  OM provides a direct source of energy/food for many soil organisms: it is the fuel in the soil food web.  Turnover of OM successively releases and immobilises elements vital to the nutrition of crops.