A COLLABORATIVE LANDSCAPE-BASED PROGRAMME INITIATED BY FUTURE FOOD SOLUTIONS IN PARTNERSHIP
WITH UTILTY COMPANIES & SUPPLY CHAIN OPERATORS.
The Sustainable Landscapes programme, launched in July 2018, brings together groups of forward-thinking arable farmers to explore sustainable farming practices that positively benefit soil health, improve water quality and provide a route to reducing emissions and sequestrating atmospheric carbon.
“Future Foods Solutions, through the Sustainable Landscapes Programme have been pivotal in delivering cultural change in farming practices. Their approach of demonstrating real world benefit to farm businesses through meaningful engagement and support, is enabling the improvement we are looking for in some of our most sensitive catchments.”
A COLLABORATIVE LANDSCAPE-BASED PROGRAMME INITIATED BY FUTURE FOOD SOLUTIONS IN PARTNERSHIP WITH UTILTY COMPANIES & SUPPLY CHAIN OPERATORS.
The Sustainable Landscapes programme, launched in July 2018, brings together groups of forward-thinking arable farmers to explore sustainable farming practices that positively benefit soil health, improve water quality and provide a route to reducing emissions and sequestrating atmospheric carbon.
PROGRAMME OBJECTIVES
IMPROVE SOIL STRUCTURE
To prevent soil erosion and flooding whilst increasing soil water holding capacity
NEW FARMING METHODS
Introduce farming methods that create co-benefits for farm profitability, supply chain resilience and the natural environment.
REDUCE NITROGEN LEACHING
Building soil health whilst reducing the risks of nitrogen leaching into surface water, boosting biodiversity
LANDSCAPE WIDE EFFECTIVENESS
Create a landscape-wide programme that benefits all stakeholders
CLIENT TESTIMONIALS
“Future Foods Solutions, through the Sustainable Landscapes Programme have been pivotal in delivering cultural change in farming practices. Their approach of demonstrating real world benefit to farm businesses through meaningful engagement and support, is enabling the improvement we are looking for in some of our most sensitive catchments.”