Does Regenerative Agriculture Actually Work? [LYNN DICKS]

February 17
54 mins

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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