If we stop livestock farming we can save the planet and turn 60% of our farmland back to nature.
A thread 🧵
Our farm is all good quality crop growing land, but around 220Ha is used for growing crops to feed our livestock which are predominantly housed all year round.
Maize, grass, wheat barley and oats are all used across our dairy and beef cattle along side a large quantity of food byproducts that are inedible to us humans.
Last year we produced 81,000kg of beef carcass, giving roughly 20,000kg lean beef. Using standard figures, that equates to 5200kg protein, and 50 million calories
We also produced 3 million litres of milk, which is another 102,000kg of protein and 1890 M calories.
In total, our livestock produced:
1940 million calories, or 8.8 million calories per Ha
And
107,200kg protein which is 90-95% available so giving 450kg available protein per Ha.
So if we ceased to farm livestock, how will we replace this lost nutrition, and only use half the area?
If I replaced the livestock on my farm…..
Beans are one alternative that can easily be grown here in the uk while also benefiting land as a break crop and a nitrogen fixing legume.
Providing 880 calories per kg, and an average UK yield of 4t, they’d provide 3.5 million calories per Ha
And at 8% protein, that would be 320kg of protein per Ha but at only between 60 - 80% available, that’s only 224kg protein per Ha.
I’m summary, on this farm and from the same area of land we would be producing 50% less available protein and only 40% of the calories if we ceased livestock production.
And then there’s the huge amount of other essential nutrients, minerals and vitamins that have to be taken into account, as well as for the other vitally important uses.
One great benefit of beans is that it is a legume and fixes nitrogen from the atmosphere - around 25-75kg/Ha per year.
My livestock however supplies me with manure which is equivalent to 76kgN / Ha, along with phosphate, potash and other nutrients for healthy soil and crops
Inefficiency is one of the greatest causes of land use in agriculture. Uk Agriculture leads the way in efficiency, environmental standards as well as for quality and welfare.
I’m a country only 60% sufficient in the food we produce, and falling, should we be outsourcing production to those less efficient than us, those who do not meet our environmental, quality, welfare or sustainability standards?
And without our livestock, who help manage and shape out iconic green and pleasant lands, what will become of the ecosystem around us?
Our farm is not out of the ordinary. We are a standard UK family farm producing the highest quality food we can while protecting and providing for the environment alongside farming.
A few thoughts on the @NoFarmsNoFoods campaign and the reaction now that their mission statement has been released.
1 - how can anyone not stand for #ukfairtrade. If it’s not fair trade then it’s unfair trade. Farmers are demanding fairness for both the industry and consumers
Much of the anti @NoFarmsNoFoods comments have been around the net zero issues making out the campaign to be willing to trash the environment for the sake of short term profit.
Knowing of the farmers at the heart of this campaign I know that is not the case. As with most farmers I know of, we all want to do more for the environment, after all, we are the ones in the coal face and the first to feel the effects of climate change.
94% of farmers under 40 say mental health is the biggest (hidden) challenge they face day to day.
As a farmer it increasingly feels like we are being put under more and more scrutiny, having to meet more and more regulation while also facing the challenge of producing more and more for less returns as we become the pawns in the supermarket wars.
Add to that the environmental and net zero requirements that are being thrust upon us and the regulations that come with it, and we feel the weight of burden upon our shoulders pressing down more and more.
The bitterness of poor quality remains long after the sweetness of low prices is forgotten.
What is the true cost of cheap food? Is it the Quality? The environment? Animal welfare? Workers rights? The risk of disruption to supply from conflict or pandemic?
When will gov look beyond this parliament and instead of focusing on quick crowd pleasers adopt a sustainable food security model fit for consumers, producers and the environment.
This gov has shown that it has no interest in food security and seems oblivious to the risks of outsourcing our food production.
Give a man a fish and feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime.
There’s been much talk recently as to what farmers must deliver in the coming years, quality sustainable food, and / or public goods? This made me question what we are delivering today on our family farm. #FarmingCan
From our farm, based on our average yields and average uk consumption per capita we are providing the highest quality, highest welfare and most sustainable produce that we can.
Enough to supply over 41,700 people for the year with one of the most nutritiously dense superfoods known to man #milk