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June 2, 2023
 
 
 
 
 
What’s the Future of Food?  
 

I’ve just wrapped up two days participating in The Future of Food USA, led by the UK-based Innovation Forum group. It was my first time at this event, and I found it to be a fascinating mash up of leading food companies and their value chain partners with a distinctively global feel and focus on scaling regenerative agriculture and supply chain resilience.

One of my biggest take-aways was how much the conversation has fully pivoted from “why should we care?” to “how do we get serious about scaling up change by 2030?” Along those lines, here are a few of my own observations from the two-day event and the enormous opportunities knocking on our door this very moment.  

One of the panels I moderated asked food companies to answer the question: “Where should sustainability be a source of competitive advantage, and where should it be inspiration for collaboration?” It occurs to me that agriculture should be asking itself the very same question.

What would it look like for producers to proactively coordinate and speak for themselves to create the roadmap for an improved system centered on their needs and wants? While commodity organizations and non-profits have certainly stepped up to fill this void, there is still a need for producer-led efforts to advocate for their points of view. With the amount of change coming, playing good defense and “telling our story” will not be sufficient.

Building on that, a major theme revolved around the Gen Z consumer and the provocative observation that these up-and-coming consumers don’t want a simple sustainability message. These digital natives “want the receipts” – the full complexity and understanding of how their food was grown and how it got to them. This new perspective absolutely rocked my Gen X “keep it simple, stupid” communications training. What a tremendous opportunity this provides us in agriculture to open eyes to what growing food, fiber and fuel actually looks like!

Finally, I walk away from these two days struck by the absolute inevitability of change, which is a novel perspective after 30 years in the sustainable production space. Against that backdrop, I want to close this week by celebrating the life and seismic impact that Dave Brandt has had on regenerative agriculture.

“The change has been from using tractors and equipment to using the brain and eyes.”

– Dave Brandt

As we collectively attempt to pick up the mantle for pioneers like Brandt, the conservation ag community must not forget a key lesson he taught us by example – to invest in cultivating a change mindset as much as we focus on practice adoption to scale “regeneration” on every acre. This wasn’t a prevalent part of the conversation of the last two days, but if we are to really write “the future of food”, it needs to be.

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

 

 
 
 
 
NRCS Delivering Climate Solutions Through the Inflation Reduction Act
 
By Terry J. Cosby, chief, Natural Resources Conservation Service: The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 represents the single largest investment in climate and clean energy solutions in American history. It provides $19.5 billion from fiscal years 2023 to 2027 for climate smart agriculture through several of the conservation programs that USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) implements. NRCS is well on its way to implementing IRA in fiscal year 2023, and we’re planning for 2024 and beyond.
 
 
 
 
New report reveals environmental, financial benefits of sustainability
 
By Jennifer Strailey, editorial director, produce The Packer: In what its organizers are calling “a unique example of high-level industry and government collaboration, with worker-led success,” Equitable Food Initiative and Measure to Improve have released a case study based on the results of their recently completed two-year “Produce and Reduce” pilot program.
 
 
 
 

News We’re Following

 

Shared by Jamie Sears Rawlings, manager of climate smart content, Trust In Food: Trust In Food’s Jimmy Emmons talks with Oklahoma Ecology Project about the impacts that crucial conservation legislation could have on the future of farms and ranches like his own.

 
 

Shared by David Frabotta, director of climate-smart content, Trust In Food: Our thoughts are with the family and friends of Dave Brandt as they celebrate his life this week. The no-till pioneer inspired countless farmers to try new ways to model nature in production systems. Trust In Food’s Jimmy Emmons was one of those farmers who learned from the godfather of soil health: “Dave Brandt was my inspiration for starting cover crops and soil health practices over 13 years ago,” Emmons says. “He was the most humble, caring man you would have ever met. He would help anyone who wanted help, and he didn’t mind sharing his successes or failures.” Education nonprofit No-till on the Plains awarded Brandt with its inaugural David Brandt Soil Legacy Award in February. In accepting, Brandt said, “I just planted a seed, and all of you have taken it farther than I thought it could go … Don’t be afraid to talk to your neighbors and tell them how important agriculture is.” Read more about Brandt’s life and his legacy from his hometown paper in the link below.

 
 

By Margy Eckelkamp, editor, Farm Journal’s The Scoop: In its second year, the Truterra carbon program had 273 farmer participants with an average payment of more than $18,000. In total, the 2022 program paid farmers more than $5.1 million for 262,000 metric tons of carbon stored. 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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