Regenerative Agronomy for Field & Arable Crops

Regenerative agronomy reimagines how staple field and arable crops are grown, shifting the focus from short-term yield alone to rebuilding soil health, biological function, and long-term farm productivity. For cereals, oilseeds, pulses, and other broadacre crops, this means combining reduced disturbance, continuous living roots, diversified rotations, and careful nutrient management to restore the natural processes that sustain fertility. The Regenerative Agronomy for Field & Arable Crops session brings together agronomists, farmers, and researchers to translate regenerative principles into practical, scalable systems that work under real commercial conditions. Discussions address agronomic decision-making, transition strategies, and the evidence linking regenerative practices to improved resilience, input efficiency, and profitability.

This session also examines how regenerative crop production systems can maintain or improve yields while reducing dependence on synthetic inputs and protecting soil and water resources. Participants in this Agriculture Conference will explore how to manage the agronomic and financial challenges of transition, interpret on-farm data, and adapt practices to different soils, climates, and cropping rotations. By connecting scientific research with hands-on farming experience, the session offers grounded, actionable guidance. Attendees leave with a clearer understanding of how regenerative agronomy can deliver healthier soils, more stable yields, and more resilient arable enterprises across diverse growing environments worldwide.

Core Regenerative Agronomy Practices

Minimising Soil Disturbance

  • Reduced and no-till establishment methods
  • Protecting soil structure and biology

Keeping Living Roots in the Ground

  • Cover cropping between cash crops
  • Extending green cover across the rotation

Diversifying Arable Rotations

  • Integrating cereals, legumes and oilseeds
  • Breaking pest and disease cycles naturally

Optimising Nutrient Management

  • Reducing reliance on synthetic inputs
  • Recycling nutrients through residues and biology

Managing the Transition

  • Balancing yield stability during conversion
  • Phased adoption to manage agronomic risk

Measuring Field Performance

  • Tracking soil and yield indicators over time
  • Using on-farm trials to refine practice

Impact on Arable Cropping Systems

Stronger Yield Resilience

Discover how regenerative practices stabilise output across variable seasons and reduce exposure to weather and input shocks.

Improved Input Efficiency

Learn how healthier soils lower fertiliser and crop-protection needs while maintaining competitive commercial performance.

Healthier, More Productive Soils

Understand how continuous cover and diversity rebuild organic matter, structure, and biological activity in arable land.

Profitable, Durable Transitions

Explore practical pathways for shifting to regenerative systems while protecting margins and long-term farm viability.

Related Sessions You May Like

Join the International Cancer & Precision Oncology Community

Connect with leading oncologists, cancer researchers, precision medicine experts, and healthcare professionals from across the globe. Share your groundbreaking research and gain insights into the latest advancements in cancer biology, precision diagnostics, targeted therapies, and innovative treatment strategies shaping the future of oncology.

Copyright 2024 Mathews International LLC All Rights Reserved

Top