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Can regenerative agriculture restore biodiversity, rebuild soil health, reduce chemical inputs — and still feed a growing global population? In this deep-dive conversation, biodiversity scientist Professor Lynn Dicks shares real-world research from commercial farms in the UK, revealing what the science actually says about regenerative agriculture, agroecology, nature-based solutions, and sustainable farming. If you care about soil health, biodiversity, carbon farming, sustainable food systems, ecosystem restoration, climate resilience, or the future of agriculture — this episode is essential viewing! ⸻ 🌱 What You’ll Learn in This Episode ✔ What regenerative agriculture actually means (and why it’s hard to define) ✔ Whether soil carbon really increases under regenerative farming ✔ How biodiversity responds to reduced tillage and lower pesticide use ✔ Why pollinators depend on landscape-scale restoration ✔ Whether regenerative farming reduces yields ✔ If farmers can be more profitable with fewer chemical inputs ✔ Why livestock production dominates global land use ✔ How agricultural policy is shifting toward nature-based solutions ✔ Who should pay for biodiversity and ecosystem services ⸻ 🔬 The Science Behind Regenerative Agriculture Through the UK-funded H3 Project (Healthy Soil, Healthy Food, Healthy People), Lynn and her team studied regenerative and conventional farms across England. The research was led by Dr Katherine Berthon. Key findings include: • Increased soil carbon storage • Improved soil structure and earthworm density • Greater biodiversity in beneficial species • Reduced synthetic fertilizer and pesticide use • Strong potential for improved farm resilience We also discuss a global meta-analysis showing farmers could reduce insecticide use by 44% without any yield loss simply by spraying only when pest thresholds are reached. That’s a massive opportunity for sustainable agriculture. ⸻ 🌍 Biodiversity vs Productivity — A False Trade-Off? Is agriculture inherently bad for biodiversity? Can we protect ecosystems and still produce enough food? This episode explores: • Integrated Pest Management (IPM) • Ecological intensification • Landscape-scale conservation • Regenerative livestock systems • Food waste and dietary shifts • The true cost of food • Public goods and nature credits With 80% of global agricultural land used for livestock production, we ask the difficult questions about land use, cultural traditions, and the future of food systems. ⸻ 💰 Is Regenerative Farming More Profitable? Evidence from the UK, US, and India suggests: • Lower input costs • Reduced fuel use (less plowing) • Comparable yields • Increased resilience • Higher profits in many cases In one study, farmer profits more than doubled under Zero Budget Natural Farming — without reducing yields. Regenerative agriculture may not just be better for the planet — it may be economically smarter. ⸻ 🎯 Why This Matters Agriculture is one of the biggest drivers of biodiversity loss, soil degradation, and climate change. But it’s also one of the biggest opportunities for ecosystem restoration, carbon sequestration, and nature-based climate solutions. The question is not whether solutions exist. The question is whether we can align economics, policy, education, and incentives fast enough. ⸻ 📚 Research & Papers Mentioned H3 Study on Regenerative Farming (UK) Overall approach and scoring system – Berthon et al. 2025 https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2024.0157 Detailed methods – Berthon et al. 2024 https://doi.org/10.1088/2976-601X/ad7bbe Study on Zero Budget Natural Farming (India) – Berger et al. 2025 https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-025-02... Study on Flower Strips in Peanut Farms (China) – Ju et al. 2025 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2025.1... ⸻ ❤️ SOIL CAPITAL - this episode was made in partnership with Soil Capital www.soilcapital.com ❤️ Special thanks to Federica Urso who did all the research for this episode and helped me craft the questions