Dr Jamila La Malfa-Donaldson, a Technical Research Associate at CHAP, brings a unique combination of scientific expertise and ...
read morePotatoes can be a particularly complex crop to produce and are increasingly seen as a high-risk for farmers who are already ...
read moreIn a commercial wormery in West Yorkshire, Wormganix manufactures ...
read moreDr Emily Harrison is an Innovation Technical Research Associate and plant specialist at CHAP (one of the Agri-Tech Centres). In this interview, she expands ...
read moreThis project demonstrates great innovation in agri-tech but also serves as a valuable case study in navigating the path from conceptualisation to commercial ...
read moreIn this insightful blog post, Dr Réka Haraszi, Innovation Sector Lead at CHAP, delves into the complex landscape of alternative proteins. Discover the ...
read moreLooking ahead, climatic predictions depict further increases in such events, emphasising the urgent need for smart solutions to future-proof a resilient ...
read moreThese facilities not only offer access to a diverse array of high-quality resources, including reference organisms, novel specimens, pathogens at various ...
read more“Biochar bridges the gap between old and new. Centuries or even millennia ago, indigenous farming communities in the Amazon rainforest were producing ...
read moreFarmers play a key role in addressing these challenges and face various pressures, such as reduced availability to chemicals for crop protection, improving ...
read more"Over the past two years, numerous initiatives and frameworks have emerged to address the growing awareness of nature loss and the role of business as ...
read moreNowadays, we have numerous ways to control introduction of heritable mutations into a plant’s genetic material. For instance, the development of computing ...
read more“In 2019 the GFI was established to sit at the nexus of the public and private sectors, convening sectoral coalitions to identify and unlock barriers ...
read more“In general, botanical gardens would not be regarded by the public as key players in the wider field of biodiversity conservation. Many would be surprised ...
read more“Robotics and automation have markedly become more prominent in our food production system, mainly in pre- and post-production. Progress in AI has led ...
read more1. Identify the need “It might seem obvious, but an innovation needs to solve someone’s pain-point, whether that’s a customer ...
read more“In the 1980s and 90s, I led a team of agronomists at Yieldcare, which later became UAP and then Agrii. The team came to believe that through a more ...
read more“We first welcomed the public onto the farm back in 2010, when we took part in a Higher Level Stewardship (HLS) scheme that included the educational ...
read more“The purpose of my role is to translate science into practice, but for this to be successful, translation needs to flow both ways. This is because as ...
read more“For my Nuffield study tour, I was lucky to spend 10 days in Canada exploring the likes of Ontario and Alberta, before spending 14 days in the States, ...
read more“In my previous blog, we looked at four different ways in which cover crops behave to control nematodes, whether that’s by acting as a poor host, or ...
read more“The wide-ranging benefits of cover crops are well documented, examples include their ability to improve soil health, increase organic matter and reduce ...
read moreHere in a guest blog with CHAP, Dave Scott, Founder and Chief Technical Officer for Intelligent Growth ...
read moreBefore we deep dive into the complex realm of regulation, we should start with why we need it at all. Regulation is a process of putting balances in place ...
read more“My interest in sustainable agriculture stems from my passion for understanding how the biosphere creates complexity in the natural world. For example, ...
read moreHow does the soil microbiome affect crops? It’s been known for decades that microorganisms in the soil can be beneficial or detrimental ...
read moreDr Andreea Stroia is CHAP’s Innovation Content and Outreach Coordinator based in Dundee, Scotland. Here, she takes us through her journey so far in the ...
read moreAdopting practices and specialised agricultural machinery Some conservation and regen-ag practices require the ...
read more1.Genomic technologies Genomic technologies, in particular DNA sequencing, have revolutionised our understanding of ...
read moreToday the Five Case Model is recognised as the HM Treasury gold standard for the development of business cases and is a requirement of central government ...
read moreWhat is the soil microbiome? The soil microbiome is the community of microorganisms present in the soil, incredibly complex with more ...
read moreManaging Director, Harry Watts, explains the motivation behind this shift in a guest interview with CHAP. What sparked your interest in CEA? As ...
read moreMiscanthus is a relatively new crop in the UK, and as a result, myths about its establishment and impact remain. Mark Coleman, Customer Accounts Manager ...
read moreFaye McDiarmid is one of CHAP’s Technical Liaison Officers. She is based at Rothamsted Research, in the Digital Phenotyping Lab. Here she expands on ...
read moreNot only is Miscanthus an ornamental grass species, it is also a high yielding energy crop, growing more than three metres tall. It produces a crop every ...
read moreDr Sumanta Talukdar, Founder & CEO of Gardin, takes us through the importance of digital phenotyping in agriculture, his views on the sector and what ...
read moreMark Nightingale, Oilseed Rape Plant Breeder and Technical Manager for Elsoms Seeds Ltd, ...
read morePart of laboratory facilities at partner Rothamsted Research, the microscope enables the early detection of transgenic expression including DAPI, CFP and ...
read moreDr Mike Reeve, Head of Bioscience for CHAP partner CABI, has been using his long expertise in method development to overcome this hurdle, and to make MALDI-TOF ...
read moreDr Laura Cumplido-Marin, CHAP’s Technical Liaison Officer at Cranfield discusses what this means for agriculture. “Moderate and normal amounts of ...
read more“The overarching theme of the event was ‘Happy Food, Healthy Flowers’, highlighting the need to focus our attention on plant health to address food ...
read moreAlex Jubb is CHAP’s Capability Co-ordinator and joined the team during Covid-19 to chair regular partner meetings and coordinate associated administration. ...
read moreAside from being a CHAP member, Gardin is a start-up group based in Oxfordshire focused on developing optical remote sensing technology and machine learning ...
read moreCEO and Co-Founder of Phytoform Labs Ltd, Dr Will Pelton, believes that lupins have great potential, and thanks to recent legislation introduced to speed ...
read moreIn the agricultural sector, it seems there’s not just one, but two ‘valleys of death’ for innovations to overcome. This term refers to certain points ...
read more“For many, vertical farming was over-sold in the early days, as a miracle solution for food production. Yes, there are many exciting innovations within ...
read moreDr Cumplido-Marin is CHAP’s Technical Liaison Officer based at Cranfield University - the institution where she investigated the topic as part of her ...
read moreFundamental research In plants, the immune system is controlled at many different levels including through the expression of different ...
read moreDiversifying diets The global alternative protein market has been growing at a fast pace in recent years, and is projected to reach ...
read moreCHAP’s Innovation Sector Lead Martin Squire discusses the need for continuing innovation in energy supply and efficiency, to help extend the range of ...
read moreDuring the keynote discussion, Defra’s Minister for Farming, Fisheries and Food, Victoria Prentis, spoke about the key role that agricultural systems ...
read moreSoil consists of biological, physical and chemical components that collectively provide a medium in which plants can grow, forming a ‘living organism’. Beyond ...
read moreDr Réka Haraszi is a Sector Lead with CHAP’s Innovation team. Here she outlines her career to date, and reflects on CHAP’s role in transforming crop ...
read moreModern agriculture is heavily reliant on a range of chemical pesticides to which there is increasing pest resistance and issues of human and environmental ...
read moreCurrently we are in the middle of a considerable re-think about how agricultural land is used, and that provides a great opportunity that we overlook at ...
read moreProtein, specifically protein for plant-based diets, is a hot trend in the food world. Despite this, the UK imports a large proportion of its plant-based ...
read moreMany farmers face the same problem: how to efficiently produce crops to a tight margin while also being sustainable and protecting the environment. Key ...
read moreTo celebrate International Women’s Day Dr Andreea Stroia, CHAP’s Innovation Content and Outreach Coordinator at CHAP, walks us through the focus of ...
read moreMy interest in regen ag dates back to my gap year in Australia, observing the adjustments farmers had made to make the most of their often-arid soils. ...
read moreWhen we launched, we were an unknown quantity outside academia, so needed access to a demonstrator, but more importantly, we needed a platform to showcase ...
read moreThere is a lot of discussion taking place at the moment regarding soil health and carbon policies and, as a result, the role of farmers in helping to look ...
read moreLast time I looked at how we can use the information – or datasets – collected through digital phenotyping and introduced the idea of proxy measurements. ...
read moreAs I explained in my earlier articles, modern phenotyping is often image based and involves a range of different kinds of sensor technologies. Often, the ...
read moreLast time I examined the field scale gantry-mounted digital phenotyping equipment available at Rothamsted Research and Cranfield University. This high-tech ...
read moreLast time I explained that phenotyping is increasingly about capturing images that then allow us to extract measurements. To recap, you can measure fields ...
read moreIf someone asked me what phenotyping was, I would say it was about the study of form and function: how living things appear, how they grow and what factors ...
read moreIntercropping is the practice of growing a mixture of crop species, either spatially within a field (be it using structured rows of alternating crops or ...
read moreCHAP has supported a crop research track sprayer at the James Hutton Institute (JHI), a leading innovator in the agriculture, environment, and land-use ...
read moreI firmly believe that this is the most exciting time ever to be a farmer: the opportunities coming our way are extraordinary so this is the perfect time ...
read moreOur Plants, Our Future addressed a range of plant health challenges, as well as considering policymaking and alternatives to pesticides. It was particularly ...
read moreFollowing the success of our first ‘isolate of the week’ social media series, we have decided to run a sequel. Sophie Lane, CHAP’s National Reference ...
read moreDr Steve Edgington is CABI’s Biopesticide Specialist. He has more than 25 years’ experience in protecting crops using biologicals and leads the work ...
read moreThe Plant Phenotyping and Soil Health Facility at Cranfield University facility has the capability to replicate the entire cropping cycle, from ...
read moreCHAP has recently acquired a range of advanced agricultural machines at Newcastle University, complementing the existing Field Scale Precision Equipment ...
read moreDr Jennifer Banfield-Zanin is Senior Project Manager and Head of Sustainability and Entomology, at CHAP partner Stockbridge Technology Centre in Cawood, ...
read moreWhen most people think of digital phenotyping, they may think of scoring crop traits for breeding or assessing a product. But in CHAP’s Digital Phenotyping ...
read morePlant phenotyping is an essential component in a lot of key aspects of crop science. For example, if you are a crop breeder, you will have to score large ...
read moreImaging technologies have the potential to become a key player as a method for early detection of pests and diseases, due to the need to rapidly identify ...
read moreDr Laura Cumplido-Marin is a Technical Liaison Officer, based at Cranfield University, in the Plant Phenotyping and Soil Health Facility. Here she chats ...
read moreDefra’s introduction of the Sustainable Farming Incentive’s (SFI) soil standards has reinforced the importance of building a healthy soil system. With ...
read moreThe Climate Change Bites panel of experts discussed the impact of climate change on biodiversity loss and the shifts in insect and tick population numbers ...
read moreSuccessfully detecting early-stage diseases, before any symptoms are visible to the naked eye, is challenging for both growers and agronomists: understanding ...
read moreFor plant breeders, developing new varieties of plants and seeds is a long and expensive process. Furthermore, once a new variety is on the market, its ...
read moreThe main focus of the Digital Phenotyping Lab is multispectral imaging. ...
read moreAgriculture is heavily reliant on seeing and understanding the natural world. We look at the benefits of digital plant phenotyping for those on the front-line ...
read moreThe breeding process is never going to be instantaneous and the burning question now is if we are at the point where the speed of breeding is fast enough ...
read moreThe outward characteristics of a plant, which are influenced both by the internal genotype (the DNA code that tells the plant what it is) and the external ...
read moreDr Archita Barua is a Technical Liaison Officer, based at our office at CABI, in Egham. Here she chats about her career to date, explains why she decided ...
read moreAt CHAP’s recent Advisory Group, led by Ms Senior, key players from both inside and outside of agriculture were invited to discuss ESG and share experiences. ...
read moreAs seen previously, innovation can be a slow process. But surely now in the modern scientific age, it is quicker? At CHAP I certainly think it can be, ...
read moreFaba beans and lupin have great potential to be cultivated in the UK but, as a general rule they are currently underutilised and overlooked crops. The ...
read moreProtein and other nutrient composition of crops are primary determinants of how they can be used after harvest. Currently, plant proteins in the UK for ...
read moreDr Bastow began by putting the spotlight on how farming has directly benefited from scientific research and innovation over the past few centuries. “Science ...
read moreI love working with farmers. Especially those looking to develop, change, improve and seek new solutions and innovation to the ever-changing challenges. ...
read moreProtein is a key part of any balanced diet, and has traditionally come from animal products (meat, dairy, eggs) with plants such as pulses and nuts playing ...
read moreBiopesticides are becoming an integral part of integrated pest management (IPM) programmes particularly in the horticultural sector, and are likely to ...
read moreDr Jemma Taylor is a Research Associate for New Innovations, based at our office at Rothamsted Research in Harpenden. Here she chats about her career to ...
read moreIn our recent social media series “Ross’s Routine”, Ross McKellar, CHAP’s Research Assistant at the Innovation Hub for Controlled Environment Agriculture ...
read moreRoss McKellar is the Research Assistant at our partner Liberty Produce, up at the James Hutton Institute in Dundee. He is responsible for day-to-day maintenance ...
read moreI am guessing you have heard of ‘public money for public goods’ or Environmental Land Management, which is the future of agri-environment schemes. ...
read moreMartin Evans was elected to the CHAP board as member director at the last AGM. Here he chats to CHAP about his varied and extremely well-travelled career ...
read moreThe Groundswell Regenerative Agriculture Conference and Show witnessed the biggest and broadest attendance yet. It was a melting pot of information and ...
read moreWith global controlled environment production expanding significantly and peat-use removal accelerating, it is clear that more needs to be done to provide ...
read moreOne of the great delights of being CHAP’s International Business Development Manager is the opportunity to attend a wide range of amazing international ...
read moreIn part one of this three-part series, Dr Aurélie Bovi set out the challenges faced by the UK horticulture industry in its search for reliable and sustainable ...
read moreLucy Plowman is the Technical Liaison Officer at our partner Stockbridge Technology Centre. She works closely with the staff at STC, looking after the ...
read moreIn our recent social media series #Isolateoftheweek Sophie Lane, CHAP’s National Reference Collection Technician at CABI, shared her favourite microorganism ...
read moreDr Nicolas Kral is the Chief Technology Officer of Phytoform Labs, which he co-founded in 2017 with CEO Dr William Pelton. Earlier this year, Dr Kral spoke ...
read moreOur paper A Literature Review of Biological and Bio-Rational Control ...
read moreDr Alex McCormack, CHAP’s Scientific Support Coordinator, has been invited to present on behalf of CHAP at industry trade show, Cereals. The event offers ...
read moreDr Franklin Ilogu is the Capability Research Associate for CHAP’s Phenotyping Lab at Rothamsted Research. He previously worked at NAIT – Industry Solutions ...
read moreHannah Senior hosted CHAP’s recent Advisory Group where key players, working both inside and outside agriculture, were invited to discuss AI and share ...
read moreDr Tom Ashfield heads up CHAP’s Phenotyping Lab at Rothamsted Research. His work is focused on using digital imaging to ease high-throughput phenotyping ...
read moreOverall, the problem boils down to how to modify how crops are being grown now in order to maximise the profitability when they are sold in future. The ...
read moreIn order to champion the use of novel or alternative plant protection products, we need to try to truly understand what they are and how best to use them. Biopesticides ...
read moreProfessor Neil Boonham is the Chair of Applied Crop Science at Newcastle University’s Institute for AgriFood Research and Innovation. We chatted to him ...
read moreKate Brunswick, Strategic Relationship Manager at CHAP Member Innovation Agri-Tech, has learnt a lot as the company applied for a Food Standards certification. ...
read moreI won’t be the first and I won’t be the last to have had my trade (marketing), dumbed down and considered as not business critical. During such conversations, ...
read moreWill Wells is the founder and CEO of innovative agri-tech Artificial Intelligence business Hummingbird Technologies. The aim is to increase yields, optimise ...
read moreSurging population growth has many implications for the planet and humanity. The biggest question for the nearly 4 billion people currently living in less ...
read moreJohn McElhone (left) and Micheál McLaughlin (far left) are the co-founders of CHAP member CropSafe. John is the Chief Exec, while Micheál has taken on ...
read moreIn November 2020, two scientists, Emmanuelle Charpentier and Jennifer A Doudna, received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their work understanding Clustered ...
read moreCharles Veys is the Managing Director of Fotenix, which provides diagnostic equipment for the agriculture sector, to help growers identify disease symptoms ...
read moreAs part of its International Pest Horizon Scanning (IPHS) capability, CHAP has funded the distribution of 180 tablet devices to extension workers across ...
read more“Trust me – it’ll make your crops grow better.” If these words were true every time they were uttered to a farmer, there’d be no hunger. That’s ...
read moreNematodes or roundworms are microscopic, non-segmented, worm-like organisms found in all sorts of ecosystems, from deep ocean vents to mountain peaks. ...
read moreMartin Driscoll is the CEO of Dyacare, a company that provides global access to sustainable solutions for crop nutrition and health, soil conditioners ...
read moreFood is big business in Yorkshire and the Humber. In fact, food manufacturing makes up about 20% of our GVA. The industry is reliant on our rural landscape ...
read moreThe green revolution was ushered in by new chemistry, mechanisation and advances in plant breeding. The results were miraculous gains in crop yields around ...
read moreFirst synthesized in 1950 and originally patented as a chelator in the Sixties, glyphosate has been with us for longer than 85% of the UK population. It ...
read moreIn many ways a coronavirus is what we would consider another invasive species, novel to its new hosts and neighbours but well known to its original ones ...
read moreNutritionist Barbara Bray has a passion for educating people about food and nutrition, and her firm Alo Solutions advises agri-food businesses on nutrition ...
read moreIn December 2019, I spent a week in India as part of a British Trade Delegation looking at the potential for collaboration between government, academia ...
read moreAnt Surrage is a technical development specialist at agricultural supplier - and CHAP member – Fargro. We chatted about his passion for plant protection ...
read moreDr Matthew Ryan is a microbiologist and curator of the Genetic Resource Collection at CABI (the Centre for Agriculture and Bioscience International), in ...
read moreThe innovative integration of technologies, delivering low-cost sustainable energy, can significantly reduce the costs of growing food in hydroponic/vertical ...
read moreCaroline Drummond has been Chief Executive of LEAF since it started in 1991. After graduating in Agriculture she worked on farms in the UK and overseas ...
read moreThe atmosphere and focus around this year’s Cereals event can be neatly summed up by a quote from Jeremy Moody, of the Central Association of Agricultural ...
read moreIn what looks like being the worst recession in UK history, UK farmers and food processors are playing their part to keep the country’s economy going. ...
read moreHaving grown up on the fairly rural Isle of Wight, and being the son of a butcher, I’ve probably had more exposure to the agricultural world than most ...
read moreUse of controlled environments for crop growth is increasing in the UK. However, we are still way behind countries such as the USA and Japan, which have ...
read moreDr William Pelton is the CEO of Phytoform Labs. He co-founded the company in 2017 with Nicolas Kral, whom he met while studying at Imperial College London. ...
read more“I attended the Oxford Farming Conference (OFC) for the first time in 2018. A fellow 2017 Nuffield Farming Scholar and good friend from Brazil was invited ...
read moreFormer John Innes Centre scientist Dr Belinda Clarke has been Director at AgritechE since its launch in 2014. Originally trained as a plant scientist, ...
read moreVertical farming is on the rise. Many people are becoming aware of the potential of indoor and vertical farming. It allows crops to be grown year-round, ...
read moreThese new technologies include Artificial Intelligence, robotics, drones, gene editing, the Internet of Things, among many others. The interests of ...
read moreAll too often in agricultural research and development, farmers are seen to be just the end users. In fact, only 1% of agricultural research in the UK ...
read moreThere’s a lot of talk about “big data” at the moment; the kind of data that is collected by satellites or huge sensor networks, processed in vast ...
read moreAs chief executive of the Agricultural Technology Organisation UKTI, and a wide experience of working with Government especially scientific regulatory ...
read moreA great deal is talked about the need to make farming ‘smarter’: the need to take on new technologies that offer a whole plethora of opportunities. ...
read moreThe major stages in the data and diagnostics pipeline are; data capture, sampling and analysis, machine learning, management and automation. Each of these ...
read moreVertical farming is a method of growing crops in stacked or vertical layers, leading to a higher yield for a given footprint i.e. it enables farms to produce ...
read moreA new world of opportunity is dawning for agriculture. The way we farm is about to change forever. We’re on the cusp of a fourth agricultural revolution: ...
read moreI believe the soil is a farm’s bank account and its most valuable asset, yet too often it’s treated with little respect. My company is now working ...
read moreEmma Kelcher is one of the new breed of farmers: breaking away from the stereotypical image, she is young and female. We spoke to her to find out what ...
read moreI think there is a real sense in which the agricultural industry is allowing others to tell its story and failing to defend itself from their accusations. The ...
read moreData has revolutionised industries across the board. In manufacturing, maintenance costs have been reduced by 40%, waste by 20% and yields improved by ...
read moreSoilless Controlled Environment Agriculture, hydroponics and aeroponics, is expanding its reach beyond the herbs and salad crops it has become synonymous ...
read moreAt this time of year, when the sun barely seems to rise above the horizon and our attentions are focused on the rich pickings that the festive season can ...
read moreTo mark World Soil Day, Professor Jane Rickson from Cranfield University outlines what we can do to preserve our soils, and how the CHAP Phenotyping and ...
read moreYorkshire and the Humber host a world-class research base in a strongly agricultural region. So it’s perhaps not surprising that the area is full of ...
read moreDr Ross’s report was published by the Nuffield Farming Scholarship Trust in October. Here she summarises her findings, outlining the crucial need for ...
read moreThe concept of collaboration beyond its dictionary meaning is a fairly new one for me. Prior to starting my current job, I must admit my mind never dwelled ...
read moreLosing CIPC (our mainstay sprout suppressant) at a European and national level will be a huge blow to the potato sector. Nationally, our dead-reckoning ...
read morePesticides are under increasing scrutiny. Richard Maycock examines the challenges facing producers and growers as they battle to protect crops, while still ...
read moreWhat led a group of Bristol University students to decide to set up a food production company while they were in the middle of doing their finals? Read ...
read moreCHAP has partnered with RIPE to launch the NLG Centre. Phillip Lee explains why this EFTE-clad greenhouse is an important advance in the field of controlled ...
read morePhillip Lee is the founder, MD and CEO of Evolve Growing Solutions and RIPE. CHAP finds out what drives him and how he is intending to revolutionise the ...
read moreEntrepreneur (noun): A person who sets up a business or businesses, taking a financial risk in the hope of profit. Oxford English Dictionary Entrepreneurship ...
read moreIn September, the National Farmers' Union of England and Wales (NFU) unveiled its vision describing how British farming can reach net zero greenhouse gas ...
read moreSituated in the heart of Yorkshire, Stockbridge Technology Centre works to develop the horticultural and agricultural industry through technology transfer ...
read moreNutrients in controlled environment agriculture (CEA) are combined with water as a fertigation solution, and can be generally described as being either ...
read moreOver the past couple of years, the National Reference Collection team at CABI in Egham have done a lot of work into developing a rapid and inexpensive ...
read moreZeina Chapman is a director at Liberty Produce, which is partnering with CHAP to create the Innovation Hub for Controlled Environment Agriculture, within ...
read moreThe only constant is change. It’s a truism, but the outcomes are profound. For an example, you only need to look at Brexit in the UK. Whatever your political ...
read moreHow did Professor Jane Rickson become one of the UK's leading soil health experts? Read our interview to find out... How would you describe ...
read moreCHAP membership is available to all, from new start-ups to established organisations. Our mission is to better understand the challenges facing the industry ...
read moreChris Delf writes “Since joining CHAP on January 7th 2019, I have been completely overwhelmed by the depth of research capabilities that ...
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