Top Producer
 
View in Browser
June 15, 2023
 
 
 
 
 
Aligning Conservation Ag With What Consumers Want
 

Consumers are confused about what is healthy and what is sustainable, but it’s clear they are actively looking for options that make them feel like they are making responsible choices that are better for their well-being.

In an August 2022 report by NielsonIQ on alternative proteins that included meat and dairy, health and nutrition ranked as the top reasons that consumers are eating more alternatives on a regular or occasional basis.

Environmental impact plays a significant part in alternative meat consumption, too, with consumers saying they avoid animal-based products because they are associated with unsustainable practices, and they worry a plant-based diet is not enough because of unsustainable plant production.

Consumers are being inundated with conflicting messages about the health of their food on a continuous basis. Even the experts disagree and change their minds. It would be impossible to play defense against the volume of “healthy” and “sustainable” claims being made, and I don’t think it would be productive to enter that fray.

But we do need a better offense if we want to inform consumers about the benefits of production agriculture and the progress American producers are making toward conservation in the U.S. It starts with helping producers understand that the conversation is happening without them if they’re not willing to engage.

In the most recent State of Sustainable Ag Report by Trust In Food and Field to Market, just 1 in 3 producers agree that consumers and food companies have a right to know the management practices they use on their farms and ranches. If we can’t feed consumer demand for information on sustainable production systems, then they’ll assume that claims vilifying production agriculture are true.  

Consumers are hungry for more information. In the same Nielson study, Regenerative Agriculture ranked high in consumers interest in exploring more sustainable food with 70% saying they have tried or are willing to try foods grown regeneratively, more than any other production system, such as vertical farming or lab-grown meat.

Consumers want to do the right thing for their health, their families and the climate. Farmers want to do the right thing for their land, their businesses and the next generation. We have a unique opportunity in time to align the two by helping farmers tell their stories.

Have a great farmer story to tell? Contact me and let us help you.

Yours in regenerative ag,
Amy Skoczlas Cole
President, Trust In Food™

 
 
 
 
Dust Storms Shouldn’t Happen in the Corn Belt
 
Guest Commentary, Farm Journal’s AgWeb: Could the catastrophic dust storm along I-55 in Illinois have been prevented? Yes! If the farmland had been in continuous no-till with cover crops there would have been no dust. No wrecks. No deaths. No injuries. No drivers upset because the main highway from Chicago to St. Louis was shut down for almost 24 hours. The tragedy of the infamous Dust Bowl era of 1930s was repeated on I-55 in the heart of the U.S. Corn Belt.
 
 
 
 
Celebrating National Dairy Month with New Insights from Innovation Center for U.S. Dairy
 

Shared by Jamie Sears Rawlings, manager of climate-smart content, Trust In Food: At Trust In Food, we are celebrating National Dairy Month by shining a light on the producers and organizations that are making dairy more sustainable and ensuring that they are producing milk that you can feel good about enjoying. ACAM partner, Innovation Center for U.S. Dairy, explores how enteric methane contributes to GHG emissions by dairy cattle and how to reduce it through feed additives. What would producers need to know to feel comfortable using them?

 
 
 
 

News We’re Following

 

By Margy Eckelkamp brand leader, Farm Journal’s Top Producer and The Scoop: “It’s an exciting time for us in this space with sustainable ag,” says Matt Marshall, Nutrien Ag Solutions Vice President, Sustainable Ag and Retail Strategy. “We have many downstream players seeking outcomes but lacking the capabilities to bring those about. This partnership recognizes Nutrien’s capabilities to collect the field level data and quantify the outcomes.” 

 
 

Shared by David Frabotta, director of climate-smart content Trust In Food: “We invested $289 million in sustainable agriculture breakthroughs, amounting to a total investment of $1.325 million since 2020. We helped farmers produce over 2 million tonnes of crops with programs for lowest residues, benefited 6 million hectares of farmland though our soil and biodiversity projects, and trained 12.9 million people on the safe use of our products.” Read more about Syngenta's commitment to the sustainable future of agriculture in their recently released ESG Report.

 
 

Shared by Jamie Sears Rawlings, manager of climate-smart content, Trust In Food: Valent U.S.A. recently announced a new product assessment framework with specific criteria that enables the company to evaluate and define “sustainable solutions” across its broad portfolio of agricultural products. The new framework, called the Sustainable Solutions Criteria, is designed to help growers and customers attain a more sustainable agricultural crop production operation.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Connect With Us:
You are receiving this email because you are a subscriber or past subscriber to a Farm Journal Product.
 
 
 
Copyright 2023 Farm Journal, Inc 8725 Rosehill Road Lenexa, KS, 66215