Does it pay to put soil health practices that can sequester carbon to work?
That’s the question the Soil Health Institute, headquartered in Morrisville, North Carolina, set out to answer when staff members interviewed 100 farmers in nine states who had been practicing no-till, using reduced tillage, or growing cover crops for at least five years.
After conducting a partial budget analysis of the economic data gathered from the farms, the institute found that the answer to the question was a resounding yes: Implementing soil health practices can indeed be profitable.
The nine states in the analysis are responsible for 71% of the corn and 67% of the soybeans grown in the United States. The states represented in the survey were Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Ohio, South Dakota, and Tennessee.
In the study of farms where soil health practices have been used, net income increased for 85% of farmers growing corn
and 88% of farmers growing soybeans. Some 67% reported achieving higher yields in all crops after adopting soil health practices than the yields they realized with their former conventional production systems. Farmers in the survey reduced the average cost to grow corn by $24 an acre and by $17 an acre to grow soybeans. Farmers surveyed increased net farm income by an average of $52 an acre for corn and $45 an acre for soybeans.
Increased Resiliency
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Mid-November 2023-Ausgabe von Successful Farming.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Mid-November 2023-Ausgabe von Successful Farming.
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KRISTOPHER KLOKKENGA
The Illinois native farmed in Ghana and lived in Denmark before coming home to take over his family's operation.
DON'T LET YOUR GUARD DOWN WHEN USING A SKID STEER
These mini workhorses are fun to operate and make chores go quickly. But injuries can occur if safety isn’t top of mind.
MEET NCBA PRESIDENT MARK EISELE
This Wyoming rancher brings a lifetime of cattle experience.
TOP SHOPS
THREE DIFFERENT APPROACHES TO TURN A SHOP INTO YOUR FARM'S HEADQUARTERS.
GRAZING MANAGEMENT TRANSFORMS GRASSLANDS
Developing the land's natural resources benefits the ranch operator and the wildlife.
KNOW YOUR NOZZLE
Small factors can help optimize herbicide applications.
MOUNTAINS OF MACHINERY
COMMODITY PRICES ARE LOW AND INTEREST RATES ARE HIGH. BUT AN OVERSUPPLY OF USED EQUIPMENT OFFERS OPPORTUNITIES.
DAIRY BARN FLOORING
It starts at the ground level.
SHOP HACKS
Great storage improvisations using PVC pipe.
HOW TO KILL A FARM
Problem: Out-of-state, non-farming heirs want their farming brother to do all the work but share decisions and profit.