Reducing Emissions In The Food & Beverage Industry Requires Farmers To Make Progress

  • 📰 ForbesTech
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 40 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 19%
  • Publisher: 59%

Indonesia Berita Berita

Indonesia Berita Terbaru,Indonesia Berita utama

Carbon marketplaces are being touted as a win/win opportunity for farmers to make more money while allowing food & beverage companies to reduce emissions.

The percentage of acreage devoted to no till farming is increasing in the US because the long-term effects of intensive farming are not good for the land. But farmers face decreasing yields for the first couple years after moving to no till. Farmers may need incentives to move to no till farming on a permanent basis. Corporations looking to reduce their value chain emissions can provide those incentives by buying carbon credits.

Verification that carbon really is being reduced is critical to getting large food companies and retailers to buy the credits. At, soil samples and on-farm data are collected. This data is then aggregated for privacy and provided to buyers to show the stewardship metrics—and demonstrate year-on-year improvements.

Trimble works with agriculture protocols that help farmers reduce their carbon footprint. Through a carbon exchange component in its software, Trimble gathers the necessary data to certify that a farmer has followed a protocol correctly, creating a certain number of carbon credits based on acreage and other factors. Trimble aggregates those credits and sells them on a carbon exchange, ultimately creating an income stream that Trimble pays back to the farmer.

 

Terima kasih atas komentar Anda. Komentar Anda akan dipublikasikan setelah ditinjau.
Berita ini telah kami rangkum agar Anda dapat membacanya dengan cepat. Jika Anda tertarik dengan beritanya, Anda dapat membaca teks lengkapnya di sini. Baca lebih lajut:

 /  🏆 318. in İD

Indonesia Berita Terbaru, Indonesia Berita utama