Keeping agricultural soils healthy can help us tackle climate change. According to the FAO, nearly 10% of carbon emissions could be sequestered in agricultural soils over the next 25 years.
How exactly do soils capture carbon?
Can farmers do anything to influence those processes?
Don’t miss the interview with Dianna Bagnall, Research Soil Scientist of the Soil Health Institute.
Michael McNeill is a PhD agronomist trained at Iowa State University. In 1983 he started Ag Advisory Ltd, an independent agricultural consulting service providing genetic, agronomic and economic consultation for farmers. Michael also developed research work on remote sensing using GPS technologies involving aerial photographing of the land mass of a five-state area in the Midwest. He is currently researching methods to efficiently rejuvenate damaged agricultural soils.
Sarah Bell is a farmer in Rutland. She holds a degree in Food Supply Chain Management, Agriculture and Food Science. Sarah is an OFC Emerging Leader and has completed the Windsor Women in Leadership programme. Sarah has trained with the Cambridge University Institute for Sustainability Leadership and has a diploma from the Chartered Institute of Marketing. She has spoken at the Financial Times Global Food Systems Summit and at the Oxford Farming Conference.