What: This exciting two-day class will cover the following concepts and carbon farming techniques:
- Overview of practices suitable to Vermont
- Present typology of carbon farming practices and relative carbon sequestering potential
- Review promising and upcoming perennial crops for Vermont including staple crops and feedstocks for building materials and energy
- Participants will work in small groups to develop enterprise plans for carbon farming crop and livestock businesses
Who: Eric Toensmeier is author of the just-released book, The Carbon Farming Solution: A Global Toolkit of Perennial Crops and Regenerative Agriculture Practices for Climate Change Mitigation and Food Security. He's also author of Paradise Lot and Perennial Vegetables, and the co-author of Edible Forest Gardens. Eric is an appointed lecturer at Yale University, a Senior Fellow with Project Drawdown, and an international trainer. He presents in English and Spanish throughout the United States, Canada, Mexico, Guatemala, and the Caribbean. Eric has studied useful perennial plants and their roles in agroforestry systems for over two decades, and cultivates about 300 species in his urban garden. More of his writing can be viewed online at perennialsolutions.org.
Carbon farming can take many forms. The simplest practices involve modifications to annual crop production. Although many of these modifications have relatively low sequestration potential, they are widely applicable and easily adopted, and thus have excellent potential to mitigate climate change if practiced on a global scale. Likewise, managed grazing systems are easily replicable, don’t require significant changes to human diet, and—given the amount of agricultural land worldwide that is devoted to pasture—can be important strategies in the carbon farming arsenal. But by far, perennial crops and agroforestry practices (like tree intercropping and silvopasture) have the most powerful impact on a per-acre basis.
Many of these carbon farming practices are already implemented globally on a scale of millions of hectares. These are not minor or marginal efforts, but win-win solutions that provide food, fodder, and feedstocks while fostering community self-reliance, creating jobs, protecting biodiversity, and repairing degraded land—all while sequestering carbon, reducing emissions, and ultimately contributing to a climate that will remain amenable to human civilization. Some are already established in Vermont, while many more are under development or in need of experimentation.
Co-sponsors: Shelburne Farms, Chelsea Green, Vermont Edible Landscapes, and NOFA-VT