Fertiliser costs are soaring amid war in the Middle East. Will your grocery bill follow?

Australia gets half its urea – a crucial nitrogen fertiliser – from countries now impacted by the war. But research suggests higher food prices aren’t a given.

The Conversation
@Nature Robots was founded to help all kinds of #agricultural #robots drive autonomously for #regenerativefarming & solve one of #agriculture's challenges: labour shortages.
Know more👇🏻
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To @Nature Robots δημιουργήθηκε για να βοηθήσει όλα τα είδη των γεωργικών ρομπότ να οδηγούν αυτόνομα στην αναγεννητική γεωργία & να συνδράμει στην επίλυση μιας από τις γεωργικές προκλήσεις: την έλλειψη εργατικού δυναμικού.
Μάθετε περισσότερα👇🏻
https://www.linkedin.com/posts/eu-agriculture-and-food_connectivity4eu-activity-7424499419032502273-GiGE?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_ios&rcm=ACoAACcmbCYBCukF73CwAXB4AAJkSjFrBt8bVuY
Autonomous Robots for Regenerative Farming with Nature Robots | EU Agriculture and Food posted on the topic | LinkedIn

Autonomous robots for regenerative farming Nature Robots can seed, weed, monitor & harvest, helping farmers shift to regenerative practices and tackle labour shortages. But they need digital connectivity to access the data that drives every task #Connectivity4EU

The new face of British #leather – how #RegenerativeFarming is reshaping fashion

British Pasture Leather’s MADE WITH collection is a collaboration connecting farmers, designers, and makers to restore value to the land and everything that grows from it – Caroline Garland explores whether these materials could provide a compelling alternative to conventional leather

Tuesday 28 October 2025

Excerpt: "What Grady and Robinson are offering is a compelling alternative to conventional leather. The global leather industry currently relies on factory farming, toxic tanning chemicals, and untraceable supply chains that are harmful to both people and planet. Industrial tanning often uses #chromium and other hazardous substances that pollute waterways and expose workers to toxic chemicals. It’s about as far away from nature as you can possibly get.

"Robinson elaborates: 'As a designer, you don’t have the choice to work with a material that has a connection to agriculture or a specific part of the food system that you wish to support. After my own collection, I found there really wasn’t a way to work with a similar type of leather that offered that provenance that opportunity to connect to landscapes and farming communities.'

"Grady adds: 'If we are raising animals for food, we should use all parts of those animals meaningfully. We put so much care into raising them thoughtfully, prioritising welfare and #ecosystems and when transformed into leather, it’s the part that endures. I realised we don’t look at leather as an agricultural product, but we should be able to make that distinction and bring the same values we bring to our food choices.' "

Read more:
https://www.independent.co.uk/extras/indybest/fashion-beauty/the-new-face-of-british-leather-how-regenerative-farming-is-reshaping-fashion-b2845046.html

#SolarPunkSunday #AnimalProducts #VegetableTanning #RegenerativeAgriculture #BiodegradableLeather
#Microplastics #Pleather

The new face of British leather how regenerative farming is reshaping fashion

British Pasture Leather’s MADE WITH collection is a collaboration connecting farmers, designers, and makers to restore value to the land and everything that grows from it – Caroline Garland explores whether these materials could provide a realistic alternative to conventional leather

The Independent

#RegenerativeAgriculture Goes Mainstream

by Jan Lee Jul 10th 2025

"The world’s hottest year on record may also mark the beginning of the end for carbon-intensive, conventional farming. Several factors have converged to bring regenerative practices into the mainstream, while a new study demonstrates that farmers can produce just as much food while improving land productivity by transitioning away from conventional practices.

"#RegenerativeFarming first hit headlines as part of '#LivingSystemsThinking' in the 1960s, later gaining interest among health-conscious foodies when the concept was popularized by food author #MichaelPollan. Today, techniques such as #CoverCropping and integrated pest management are being embraced not only by #environmental activists but also by multinational food companies. The difference is that now, this approach is celebrated for its practical effectiveness in maintaining a consistent food supply in an era of #ClimateChange-driven supply shocks."

Read more:
https://earth.org/regenerative-agriculture-trends-and-impacts/

#FoodForAll #SolarPunkSunday
#Agroecology #RegenerativeFarming
#Intercropping #Polyculture #Resiliency #FoodSystems #ClimateChangeFarming

Regenerative Agriculture Goes Mainstream: Trends and Impacts

Regenerative agriculture can achieve similar yields to traditional farming while using much less nitrogen fertilizer and less pesticides.

Earth.Org

#RegenerativeAgriculture has its roots in #Indigenous farming

Strategic Intelligence
Fri, October 10, 2025

Excerpt: "While regenerative agriculture is growing in business settings as a method of reducing agricultural impact, and as an emissions reduction method, indigenous farmers have been responding to environmental stimuli and promoting non-intensive farming methods for millennia. Indigenous groups and farmers are the best guardians of the world’s #ecosystems."

https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/regenerative-agriculture-roots-indigenous-farming-142900539.html

#SolarPunkSunday #Agroecology #RegenerativeFarming #Agroforestry #Intercropping #Polyculture

Regenerative agriculture has its roots in indigenous farming

Consumer goods and foodservice companies are investing in regenerative agriculture to improve the environment and reduce emissions. Regenerative agriculture ...

Yahoo News

Take farming back to nature: #RegenerativeAgriculture means farmers work with the land, not against it.

By Brian CastnerUpdated September 28, 2025

Excerpt: "There is a growing community of people seeking to return wildlife to farms and our food supply — and none too soon, as our soil and bodies are in desperate need of a healthy upgrade.

"This movement operates under many names, but I prefer 'regenerative agriculture.' It’s the idea of working with natural systems, not against them, to grow healthier food and have a positive effect on the land. Regenerative agriculture practitioners consider ecosystems holistically and argue that our food system is more resilient and sustainable when farms are regarded as part of nature rather than separate. This may sound novel, but prophets like Wendell Berry have been writing about this for a long time; 'The Unsettling of America' was published in 1977.

"Our farm is in the foothills of the #Adirondacks, and the lion’s share of our land consists of slopes dedicated to pastures for grazing. We raise sheep and chickens, and when we move them across the land, we do so in ways that mimic the natural processes that produced the rich soil for the meadows in the first place. Rather than fence off one giant pasture and lock the animals in for the year, we set up many smaller paddocks and allow them to graze each spot only briefly. The sheep rotate to fresh grass three times a week. The chickens are moved even more often, twice a day. While each is in its allotted portion of pasture, the scene is one of intense eating — the lambs strip the fresh chicory and wild carrot of their leaves and tender stems. The chickens peck and scratch at the dirt, hunting for bugs. Wherever they move, they leave a path of destruction, trampling grass, devouring plants, and spreading their manure everywhere.

"But then the flock moves on, and we leave the pasture to rest. Beaten-down forage traps moisture and provides cover for fresh growth. Red and white clover pops through the netting of broken stems. Then the first shoots of timothy appear. In spring, thin-leafed plantains follow. In midsummer, it’s birds’-foot trefoil and wild carrot. In only a week or two the stems and grasses are up to my knees, and by the time the sheep return 60 days later, it’s once again a field of tall wildflowers, full of honeybees and cedar waxwings. I had never seen flocks of goldfinches (entire flocks!) until they took over my regrown pastures.

"Rotationally grazing livestock is much healthier for the animals as well. There are fewer respiratory issues, because they aren’t confined to a barn; they suffer from fewer parasites and diseases, because they are kept separate from their waste. Sheep especially are susceptible to worms that hatch in their manure and crawl up fresh shoots of grass. But by keeping them away until the worms complete their life cycle, we let the lambs stay healthy and avoid having to pump them full of antibiotics and dewormers. Happy, healthier animals make healthier food.

"This system of rotationally grazing — concentrating the flock or herd and moving it through the land and on to fresh grass — mimics animals in the wild.
Across North America, massive herds of bison and smaller groups of deer and elk once moved across the land, eating as they went. They took the energy from the plants and left behind manure and stomped grass. With their hooves, they opened and aerated the compacted soil, where a complex ecosystem of roots and rhizosheaths and bacteria could thrive.

"The term to describe this process is 'animal impact.' The idea that soil can be made healthier by putting animals on it and then removing them, leaving behind a more resilient ecosystem, is counterintuitive if you think of animals only as either messy or destructive, or consider their poop as stuff to be cleaned up rather than a resource to be used.

"Working this way requires a change in thinking, a new philosophy in farming. Our greatest asset is not our barns or equipment or even the animals. These are all easily replaceable, if occasionally expensive. No, our greatest agricultural asset is the soil, and so all of our decisions about how to manage our land should be about what’s best for the soil and by extension the pastures.

"Regenerative agriculture at scale is challenging, as our food supply system forces farmers to maintain a relentless focus on the economic bottom line, encouraging chemical-laden shortcuts. But on small farms, it is possible to work with the land, not against it. We named our venture du Trieux Farm, after my wife’s ancestors who settled in the Hudson Valley four hundred years ago, and this kind of long-term thinking informs how we operate. The land we now care for has been continuously farmed for two hundred and fifty years. One might expect that the soil would be degraded after all that time, but it need not be. We seek to add to the soil, rather than extract from it."

Read more:
https://www.bostonglobe.com/2025/09/28/opinion/regenerative-agriculture-nature-brian-castner/

Archived version:
https://archive.ph/lX9SR

#SolarPunkSunday #RegenerativeAgriculture #RegenerativeFarming #RestorativeAgriculture #Resiliency #FoodSystems

Opinion | Take farming back to nature with regenerative agriculture

Regenerative agriculture means farmers work with the land, not against it.

The Boston Globe

Healthy soil, healthy plants, healthy animals 🌎🐄 — regenerative farming connects every link in the chain. At Mulgowie Farm, these practices build resilience, restore the land, and produce healthier food for everyone.

Follow along for more highlights from our visit!

Visit Mulgowie's Website 👉 https://zurl.co/bgnhJ

#HealthySoilHealthyPeople #GreenParrot #MulgowieFarm #RegenerativeFarming #SustainableFuture #wdanielcoxiii #sustainability #sustainablebusiness

From farm to facility 🚜🥬 — we saw how Mulgowie Farm handles fresh produce with care, combining innovation and sustainability. Regenerative farming ensures healthier food makes it from soil to shelf. 🌱

Visit Mulgowie's Website 👉 https://zurl.co/bgnhJ
Follow us for more stories on regenerative farming!

#FarmToTable #GreenParrot #MulgowieFarm #RegenerativeFarming #SustainableFuture #wdanielcoxiii #sustainability #sustainablebusiness