Chris Appleby, director of On-Farm Excellence within Farm Source, said it received good interest from farmers on the new scheme.
“There’s been really good engagement with our farmers across the country on what was in behind that.”
Appleby said the tools were selected based on feedback from farmers over the past few months.
“Then, it’s about making sure that those solutions [are] scalable, available right across the country, and really importantly, [tools that] actually help and we know will make a difference in terms of increasing or supporting that emissions intensity reduction as well.”
Eligible farms under the co-operative difference scheme had to have emissions less than the co-op’s 2017/2018 baseline, accounting for emissions from feed, fertiliser, livestock and drained peat soils, with carbon offsets.
More farmers within the co-op were meeting this threshold over time, with 72% of its farmers achieving the base level or above in 2021/2022, 83% the following season and 87% in 2023/2024.