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to drive solutions sustainability Developing practical

Many factors are driving the need to improve sustainability, often centred around the environment, such as government targets to hit net zero by 2050, and policies to enhance biodiversity, or protect natural resources.

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Such high-level targets are ltering through supply chains, and increasingly a ecting the decisions growers make; a trend that is only likely to continue in coming years.

The launch of the Sustainable Wines of Great Britain (SWGB) initiative in 2020, is just one example. It aims to put sustainability at the heart of the English and Welsh wine industry, and has already attracted many leading vineyards.

Supermarket buyers are also talking more seriously about their ambitions to source 'low impact produce', at least at a strategic level, although price inevitably remains a major driver of buying decisions, especially during tougher economic times.

“But buyers know they still have targets to meet and growers will play their part in helping to decarbonise the supply chain,” Hutchinsons agronomist, Rob Saunders (pictured right) says.

While environmental and social considerations are often at the heart of the sustainability agenda, nancial aspects are equally important, he adds.

“You can’t talk about sustainability and just focus on environmental or social aspects. We’re in a capitalist system, so production has to be nancially sustainable as well.”

Equally, pro t cannot come at the expense of the environment or other capital resources, whether labour, or the soil, he adds. “No business that derives its income from running down its capital base can credibly report a pro t.”

It’s a concept that lies at the heart of the ‘triple bottom line’ accounting framework, often shortened to ‘the three Ps’; pro t, people, and the planet.

None are mutually exclusive, of course. More targeted fertiliser application, for example, bene ts crop growth, the environment by reducing the carbon footprint, and the bottom line through cost savings, while pro table businesses secure employment and support rural economies.

“So much of sustainability is about e ciency of resource use,” Mr Saunders adds. “One of those resources is land, so we need to make the very best use of the land we’re deploying. By driving up yield per unit area, you are invariably driving down the resource use per kilogram of output, whether that’s sprays, water, fertiliser, or labour.”

Data-driven decisions

Digital mapping and precision technology are playing an increasingly important role in improving e ciency, and making businesses more sustainable, Mr Saunders says.

Many growers are already realising the bene ts of Terramap high-de nition soil scanning, for example. The system uses passive, gamma-ray detection technology, to produce a highde nition map (based on 800 data points per hectare) showing all common nutrient properties, pH, soil texture, organic matter, carbon (organic and active) and cation exchange capacity, plus elevation and plant available water.

The data highlights variability across sites and allows subsequent management to be targeted more accurately.

Given the wealth of data potentially available to growers, systems such as Omnia are invaluable for providing a central 'hub' to record, store and analyse information, including Terramap soil scans, crop observations, or weather data.

Omnia’s weather forecasting capability is particularly useful, especially when combined with pest and disease forecasting models to predict threats such as scab, canker or mildew.

Improving orchard sustainability

Hutchinsons is involved with several projects that are looking to improve the sustainability of production systems across orchard and vineyard sectors, utilising the latest tools and techniques.

One such example is the 10-year Helios project, now halfway through, which is investigating whether higher orchard yields can be sustainably achieved by redesigning canopy and tree architecture to better utilise sunlight. Designs are also 'robot ready' with a view to greater mechanisation in the future –something that may be the main way to overcome ongoing labour shortages in the sector.

Initial ndings from the rst ve years show promising results, as well as highlighting various challenges still to overcome, particularly around the speed of tree establishment in some growing terms.

“Orchards don’t pay back until at least years ve, six or seven, so it’s a bit early to pick out the best systems,” says Mr Saunders. “Most orchards look good when young, but it’s keeping them productive in later years that can be the challenge, as productivity declines as trees age, and diseases such as canker inevitably creep in.”

But, it is changing consumer trends that potentially present the biggest challenge, as varieties come and go out of fashion. Cox, for example, was replaced by Gala, and now Gala orchards are being replaced by the likes of Jazz, Kanzi and Pink Lady.

“The varietal treadmill is speeding up, which means new varieties coming along now will have a shorter lifespan than those that have gone before, so the focus on rapidly establishing an orchard and getting early payback has to be even sharper.”

At Helios, the V-system of growing has shown a particularly impressive yield build up, with excellent quality, however it is not suited to machine harvesting. One of the most promising systems so far has been the low cost M116 rootstock orchard, which is shaping up well with a lower upfront capital investment.

Sequestering carbon

A separate project is aiming to nd more sustainable uses for old orchard trees that have reached the end of their productive life, and help growers reduce their carbon footprint, by producing biochar.

The idea is that because biochar is extremely resistant to bacterial breakdown, it is able to lock away carbon in a more stable form, reducing the amount lost to the environment.

Producing biochar involves carbonising the wood from old trees under high temperatures (300–1,000°C), in the presence of little, or no oxygen; a process known as pyrolysis, similar to charcoal production. This leaves behind a solid material containing around 80% elemental carbon, that can be used as a soil improver, and a long-term carbon store.

Mr Saunders says biochar sequesters around half of the total carbon contained within trees, and its application to soil could provide a way of increasing organic matter beyond the natural equilibrium.

“Many people don’t realise there is a maximum level of organic matter that any soil can support, beyond which it starts to cycle and oxidise more quickly, so adding more organic matter beyond this point simply isn’t e ective.”

The organic matter ceiling is linked to clay content, with more clay-based soils able to achieve a higher equilibrium than sandier soils.

“The only way you can increase organic matter content beyond the natural ceiling is by either ooding land to create a peat bog, or by adding biochar.”

Within the two-year project, Hutchinsons is working with Edinburgh University to conduct detailed life cycle analysis of orchard cropping. It is also undertaking agronomic evaluations of biochar use in new, and recently planted orchards, looking at the impact of high and low doses on soils and orchard productivity.

“If we can positively in uence some characteristics of orchard trees, especially young tree establishment, through improving nutrient availability, building soil organisms, increasing moisture holding capacity of the soil, or building better soil texture, and potentially getting trees into full cropping one year faster, that will have a very signi cant impact on the viability of an orchard.”

The team will also look at other aspects, such as whether biochar use increases the calcium, or dry matter content of apples, which in turn could a ect storability.

“Other parts of the world, such as Germany, Scandinavia and the US, are ahead of us on this, so the UK is behind the curve, with very limited orchard-speci c data on biochar use. There are lots of unknowns, which is why we’re doing this project.”

Although work is focused on orchards, the principles apply elsewhere, including vineyards, where large amounts of material are often removed on an annual basis, says Mr Saunders.

In large, productive vineyards, there may be scope to bale up prunings to use as a feedstock for turning into biochar, as well as removing material and reducing the risk of disease carryover. “It’s potentially adding another output from the vineyard, providing wine, employment, environmental services in terms of biodiversity, and carbon sequestration.”

Cover crop potential

There is increasing interest in sowing green covers in many situations to suppress weeds, improve soil health, and build biodiversity. They also o er an added aesthetic factor, which may be important to those who open sites for public events or tourism.

Using cover crops to improve soil health in hop gardens is the subject of one Innovative Farmers project.

“It comes from the realisation that at the end of a cropping cycle, the entire hop plant is removed, and growers understandably don’t want to put old material back onto the land for fear of spreading disease, notably verticillium wilt,” says Mr Saunders. “So, over time, soil organic matter declines.”

Growers typically counter this by importing other sources of organic material, such as straw, compost and manure, which can be expensive, and raises the risk of damaging soil structure when running heavy spreading equipment on wet soils outside the growing season.

“We’re therefore looking at growing organic matter in-situ, by establishing a cover crop just ahead of harvest, which is then terminated in March or April the following year, so it’s not competing with the hops.

“This introduces a lot of organic matter into the hop garden without needing to buy it in.”

Concerns about verticillium wilt risk limit the cover crop species that can be used in hop gardens, Mr Saunders acknowledges, but monocots are una ected by the disease, so work up to now has focused on oat and rye mixes.

“It would be interesting to try a more diverse cover crop mix, perhaps including a legume, such as red clover. But the unknown is how these other species may act as an alternative host for verticillium wilt.”

It is hoped that a separate Innovative Farmers project, looking at controlling two spotted spider mite with predatory insects, might shed more light on such risks. This ongoing work aims to create more favourable habitats for natural predators, such as Amblyseius andersoni and Amblyseius cucumeris, by establishing cover crops in the alleyways of the hop garden. Mixes could include broadleaf species, potentially providing useful information that overlaps with the understanding of how cover crop species in uence verticillium wilt risk.

Elsewhere, Hutchinsons is working with a vineyard in the West to see if microclover can be used as a living mulch, for weed suppression, biodiversity and soil health. In vineyards, living mulches could o er added bene ts from shading the soil, and reducing soil temperatures in extreme summer heat; bene tting soil organisms and reducing vine stress.

Microclover’s short, stunted growth habit is potentially well suited to the role, as it minimises competition, allows good air ow around vines, and facilitates bunch ripening later in the season. As a legume it also xes some atmospheric nitrogen to the soil.

“But one issue with legumes is that unless you terminate them, they don’t really volunteer to share that much nitrogen,” notes Mr Saunders.

Another vineyard Mr Saunders works with has sustainable practices at the core of its business, and is borrowing insights from the regenerative agriculture community, developing new approaches to managing cover crops in vineyards that might better utilise the bene ts from leguminous species.

They are investigating whether one solution is to establish alternate rows of legume and cereal cover crops. The thinking is that by terminating the legume cover, before sowing it with a cereal, and vice versa, it may be possible to provide a continuous supply of nitrogen to adjacent vines, as well as carbohydrate to support soil biology, from decomposing legume roots.

Organic

Soil Option

Cloud Agro Ltd specialises in soil health and crop nutrition, delivering sustainable solutions for farmers who want to make a positive environmental impact

According to Cloud Agro founder Ross Barclay-beuthin, the company’s services and products make it possible for producers to accurately measure and e ectively treat the “burn rate of nutrients” exported during harvest, together with the “burn rate of humus (organic matter)” expended during mineralisation.

Ross was previously an arable and livestock farmer in South Africa, before becoming involved in a soil health programme with the UN and other organisations, which focused on ways in which farmers could regenerate African soils following years of intensive farming, leading to signi cant degradation in soil quality.

As part of this project, Ross experimented with water, lucerne and chicken manure on an unproductive vineyard, resulting in a four-fold increase in grape yield within just one season.

From this, Cloud Agro’s Smart Feed nutrient-based system was born.

Smart Feed is a 100% natural organic fertiliser and soil conditioner, under the brand name FutureGro. The system is based around a fully decomposed, pelleted organic fertiliser that adds nutrients, improves soil structure, and stimulates microbial action. According to Cloud Agro, it is six times stronger than FYM and a whopping 50 times more e ective than green waste, partly because it has already been composted and therefore actively improves the soil from the moment of application, compared to green manure which can take up to ve years to do the same.

Under the Smart Feed system, growers can use a calculator to work out exactly how much FutureGro is required, taking into account a number of site-speci c factors including soil type, leaching potential and the previous harvest results.

With FutureGro, as the plant grows stronger with enhanced nutrition and more balanced soils, crops can ward o disease vectors and pest attacks. However, Cloud Agro stresses that animal manure does the opposite: its application leads to the spread of weed seeds, disease vectors, and pathogens.

Repeated application of FutureGro helps nutrients become more available to crops, making soil more fertile meaning that, over time, less chemical fertiliser is needed. Applying FutureGro, on average, 1t/ha twice a year to your soil could lead to healthier crops and 25% higher yields this season, the company reckons. When considering soil sustainability, Ross’ take home advice to growers is that they should always ensure that they put back whatever they take out.

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