Episode Description
Can regenerative agriculture really restore biodiversity, rebuild soil health, increase farmer profits and still feed the world? Or is it just a powerful story we want to believe?
In this evidence-based Deep Seed conversation, biodiversity scientist Professor Lynn Dicks shares groundbreaking real-world research from commercial farms in the UK and India — revealing what the science actually says about regenerative agriculture, agroecology, nature-based solutions, and the future of our food system.
This episode is essential listening for farmers, policymakers, sustainability professionals, researchers, and anyone working to transform agriculture.
🌱 What the Research Shows
Through the UK-funded H3 Project (Healthy Soil, Healthy Food, Healthy People), Lynn and her team studied regenerative and conventional farms across England using real-world commercial data.
They found:
Increased soil carbon storage
Improved soil health and earthworm density
Higher biodiversity in key beneficial species
Reduced synthetic fertilizer and pesticide use
Strong potential for increased farm resilience
But the story is nuanced. Pollinator numbers, for example, depend heavily on landscape-scale habitat — reminding us that biodiversity restoration requires thinking beyond individual fields.
🌍 Biodiversity vs. Productivity — A False Trade-Off?
We explore whether sustainable farming and high productivity can coexist.
Topics include:
Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
Ecological intensification
Carbon farming
Landscape restoration
Livestock systems and land use
Reducing chemical inputs without reducing yields
The true cost of food
A global meta-analysis discussed in this episode shows farmers could reduce insecticide use by 44% without yield loss simply by spraying only when thresholds are reached.
That’s not ideology. That’s data.
💰 Is Regenerative Agriculture Profitable?
Profitability determines adoption.
Evidence from regenerative farms in the UK, US, and India shows:
Lower input costs
Reduced dependency on synthetic fertilizers and pesticides
Comparable yields
Increased resilience to market shocks
In some cases, significantly higher profits
We also discuss agricultural policy reform, biodiversity net gain, nature credits, and who should pay for ecosystem services and public environmental goods.
🔑 Soil Capital
This episode was made in partnership with Soil Capital - accelerating the transition to regenerative agriculture by financially rewarding farmers who improve soil health and biodiversity. wwwe.soilcapital.com
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