Soil Carbon Increases Could Boost Farm Profit
A number of pastoral farmers are likely to earn much
healthier profits this year as the result of substantial
improvements to their soil carbon levels. One large sheep
farm on the East Coast of the North Island has recorded a
large carbon increase over the past year, and a goat farm in
the Waikato has achieved a similar figure.
If
translated into carbon credits, these increases could
represent a valuable return per hectare when sold on the
voluntary carbon market.
The farmers involved are
members of the eCOGENT group and have altered soil, pasture
and animal management in ways aimed at growing topsoil.
Managing director of eCOGENT, Peter Floyd, says that he
anticipated small increases but the higher figures were
unexpected.
“A number of our members benchmarked
soil carbon levels last spring using protocols designed by
soil scientist Graham Shepherd. Sampling is now being
repeated and the results are just coming in from the lab,”
says Floyd.
“So far we have had increases ranging
from 5% to 10%, representing about 10 tonnes of carbon per
hectare. The highest figures are extraordinary so we are
rechecking them, but even at 5% they could represent a
worthwhile lift in profit of around $150 per hectare for the
farms involved.”
This potential boost comes on top
of profit rises that are already high for eCOGENT farmers.
Profit increases averaging 89% for sheep and cattle
properties and 56% for dairy units have been achieved every
year for the past three years by users of this farm business
process that draws on innovative profit indicators and
analytical software supported by mentoring, networking and
strategic planning.
“Whatever the final figures for
carbon are, this approach will drastically change pastoral
farming because it has an impact on every component of
farming and the implications are huge,” says
Floyd.
For further information visit http://http://www.ecogent.biz
ENDS