- Groundwork
- Market Engagement
- Groundwork
- Market Engagement
Summary of the Green Farm Collective
The Green Farm Collective, initiated by Tim Parton and three other Soil Farmer of the Year recipients, brings together farmers committed to regenerative practices to share knowledge and market their agricultural products and natural capital assets. Members operate net-zero farming businesses, employ regenerative techniques like cover cropping, and showcase high soil health. Through partnerships with Trinity AgTech, the Collective facilitates carbon monitoring and sales, while also selling voluntary biodiversity plots to socially responsible companies and individuals.
Farm Profile:
- Location: Across UK
- Size of Land: various
- Farm sizes: various
- Tenancy & Ownership: Both
- Nature Market Focus: soil carbon & voluntary biodiversity
- Interventions : reduced synthetic inputs, cover crops, minimum tillage, habitat creation
- Project Partners: Trinity AgTech
Acknowledgements
With many thanks for their time and insight on this case study:
Tim Parton, Farm Manager and Co-Founder, Green Farm Collective
Date published: 28/02/2024
Key Takeaways
- The Green Farm Collective serves as a platform for knowledge exchange, networking, and accessing nature markets for farmers committed to regenerative practices.
- The Collective works directly with Trinity AgTech, using their natural capital monitoring tool Sandy to baseline and monitor the environmental condition of member farms. Farmers receive a discount on the tool in return for membership. The Collective also works with Trinity Natural Capital Markets to sell soil carbon from member farms.
- The Green Farm Collective sells its biodiversity on a voluntary basis, to companies focused on corporate social responsibility and to individuals interested in supporting nature recovery
- The Collective has specific criteria for membership, including operating net-zero farming businesses, employing regenerative farming practices, and demonstrating high soil health
- The Collective is funded through subscription fees from members and a percentage of transaction revenues, including those from labelled products, carbon, and biodiversity sales.
What is Tim Parton’s approach to farming?
Tim Parton, a farmer based near Wolverhampton, has been at the forefront of embracing nature-friendly farming practices. On his 300-hectare farm, Tim produces a wide variety of crops including wheat, oilseed rape, spring malting barley, spring beans, spring lupines and spring oats. Motivated by a commitment to biological farming, Tim abstains from using synthetic inputs like fungicides, herbicides, growth regulators, or insecticides. Instead, he employs holistic methods, prominently featuring cover crops across his farm throughout the year. This approach has not only improved soil health and crop quality but also led to a resurgence of biodiversity on his farm, including a noticeable return of various bird species.
For Tim, promoting this nature-friendly farming approach goes beyond personal philosophy; it’s about aligning agricultural practices with environmental sustainability and resilience. He views nature markets as a pivotal tool for incentivising farmers to adopt such practices while contributing to broader environmental objectives.
How did the Green Farm Collective start and how does it work?
In 2021, Tim, along with three other former Soil Farmer of the Year Award recipients, established the Green Farm Collective (GFC). The farmers aimed to address the lack of awareness and support for regenerative farming practices within the agricultural community. Beyond a platform for knowledge exchange, the Collective evolved into a robust network, a trusted brand for regeneratively farmed products, and a gateway for farmers to access nature markets.
To join the Collective, farmers must operate net-zero farming businesses, possess certified credentials for their farm’s natural capital, be employing regenerative farming practices, such as cover cropping and limiting the use of synthetic inputs and demonstrate high soil health. Farmers who are still working toward these objectives can also engage with the Collective and Trinity AgTech to transition their practices and improve their soil health with the aim of eventually becoming a full member. In return, members are able to sell their agricultural products under the Green Farm Collective label and can sell their carbon and biodiversity through Trinity Natural Capital Markets (NCM). Membership to the collective also offers a discount on Trinity AgTech’s natural capital assessment tool Sandy, which helps farmers to monitor the impacts of their practices and certify their carbon units.
How is the group structured and funded?
The Collective comprises the four founding members along with over 30 associate members as of February 2024. The Collective sustains its activities through subscription fees from members (£250 per year for farm businesses) and a percentage of transaction revenues (5% for GFC and 5% for Trinity NCM), including those from GFC labelled products, carbon and biodiversity. The Collective collaborates with Trinity AgTech to assess and monitor carbon levels on member farms, allowing farmers to either sell their carbon units or retain them for offsetting their own emissions and they can sell through Trinity NCM or through another platform of their choosing.
Much of the Collective’s biodiversity is sold to companies focused on corporate social responsibility. This means that the biodiversity is sold on a voluntary basis, in contrast to Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) which is a compliance market and for which units needs to be verified through Natural England’s Biodiversity Metric. GFC biodiversity is sold in 3m2 plots through Trinity NCM to companies or individuals interested in supporting local nature recovery. The group is however exploring supporting its members with BNG trades, and Trinity AgTech’s Sandy tool can be used to conduct BNG baselining and monitoring.
The Green Farm Collective has successfully garnered high prices for its carbon credits, particularly when they bundle carbon with biodiversity uplift. Thus far the Collective has commanded £100 per tonne of carbon sequestered. Tim sees their ability to command above market prices as being tied to the narrative surrounding the group’s natural capital assets. For example, when Tim sold some biodiversity units to a local flooring company, the company’s representatives came out to the farm directly to see the wildflower meadows and cover crops that their payments had facilitated. The company then made a video on the project which they could share with their customers, demonstrating the tangible impact they were having on the local environment. Having the option to visit the sites where biodiversity and carbon are being generated can be really attractive to buyers who are interested in generating local impact.
Lessons Learned
Tim notes that embarking on this journey is hard work and so there is huge benefit in farmers coming together to support each other and collectively drive change. In coming together, farmers can begin to demand higher prices for their products and advocate for the policy and support mechanisms they need to deliver. Tim views farmers as “the heroes of the world, because nobody else can feed the world and heal the world”.