AMI experts issue warning over UK’s Sustainable Farming Initiative
Applied Microbiology International has urged the UK government to take microbiological considerations into account when creating initiatives like the Sustainable Farming Incentive - warning that the potential benefits arising from such schemes will be limited otherwise.
The call came after experts in the Food Security Advisory Group and the Healthy Land Advisory Group reviewed the Sustainable Farming Incentive, which was set up to encourage and support farmers to take actions that support food production and protect the environment.
The SFI is one of the UK’s Environmental Land Management schemes and lists a series of actions that farmers can choose to commit to and subsequently be paid for if they undertake them.
Farming scheme
Earlier this year, Defra secretary Steve Barclay announced what he described as the biggest upgrade to UK farming schemes since Brexit.
The updates, unveiled by Mr Barclay at the Oxford Farming Conference, include increased payments for farmers, about 50 new actions, 50 updates to existing actions, and 21 “premium payments” for actions that have the biggest environmental impact.
AMI’s Policy Team asked experts in the two advisory groups to review the SFI to see whether it was appropriate from a microbiological perspective and whether it seemed to have taken microbiology into consideration when it was created.
“It became apparent from our experts that it majorly lacked microbiological considerations which greatly reduces the potential benefits that could be reaped from the initiative since microorganisms are ubiquitous in the agricultural environment and have known roles that relate to and directly impact environmental health, resilience, and food production,” said Dr Lucky Cullen, Policy, Public Affairs & Diversity Manager and Daisy Neale, Policy & Diversity Officer (AMI’s Policy Team).
“As such, we penned a letter to the policymakers – Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (Defra) and EFRA, the committee that scrutinises Defra’s work.”
Winter cover crops
The experts were particularly concerned about one action listed - having multi-species winter cover crops.
“We noted that a lot more nuance is needed for this action since different types of cover crop have different effects on the subsequent crop species planted. For example, brassica are recommended as one of the cover crop species in the SFI - however some brassica species are able to harbour pathogens that are harmful to subsequent brassica species, such as oil seed rape,” the policy team said.
“Brassicae are also not hosts for arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi which are beneficial to plant health. Therefore although brassicas may be harmless in some situations, they could be less beneficial, or even harmful in others, yet the SFI as it stands doesn’t consider these impacts.”
Missed opportunity
The team also flagged that there is a missed opportunity with this action, since it informs farmers that they may destroy the winter cover crop once winter is over. This removes the chance for sustainable recycling through composting, or its potential for biofuel production.
“Another action on managing hedgerows makes no mention of how to manage cut hedgerow material,” the policy team said.
“Evidence shows that some weed species that may develop in hedgerows can harbour crop pathogens - therefore we suggested that farmers should be made aware of this risk and a management system for cut material should be included in the SFI, to prevent the risk of pathogen transmission from weeds to crops.
“A further suggestion was on an action around having winter bird food on arable and horticultural land. We suggested that more nuance is needed on the subsequent crop type that can be planted to winter bird food, since some evidence suggests there could be a small risk of pathogen transmission from wintering birds to humans. As such, we suggested that crops such as ready-to-eat vegetables should not be planted in the subsequent rotation to wintering bird food, as they are a higher transmission risk than crops which are cooked prior to consumption.
Soil health
“Our experts had a lot of thoughts around the actions pertaining to soil health and how these could be better utilised to understand the soil microbiome and soil health, but these will be further explored in a future report AMI will be publishing later this year.”
AMI also emphasised the urgent need to start formulating policy decisions and initiatives with better transdisciplinary input, suggesting this would reduce the risk of policies having unintended adverse effects and / or requiring revision.
“We received a response to our letter from EFRA acknowledging our concerns and noting they will be factoring them into their scrutiny of the Government’s ELMs, which is reassuring. We are yet to receive a response from Defra, but we hope this is a good first step for putting microbiology on the radar of policy-makers,” the policy team said.
AMI’s policy team will be publishing a brief on improving national soil health using microbial solutions later this year. This will provide recommendations which alongside the government’s ELMs will help to improve national soil health, improving national food security, increasing resilience to climate change and more. If you are interested in contributing, please email [email protected].