• How This Regenerative Farmer Cut Costs and Increased Profits [JAMES BUCHER]
    Mar 3 2026

    What happens when a former hedge fund trader walks away from finance… survives a near-fatal accident… and rebuilds his farm using regenerative agriculture?

    In this episode of the Deep Seed Podcast, James Butcher shares how he transformed his Suffolk farm from a high-input, chemical-dependent system into a diversified regenerative farming model using:


    • Companion cropping

    • Livestock integration

    • Agroforestry

    • Reduced synthetic nitrogen

    • Biological soil health principles

    And here’s the kicker:

    He slashed growing costs from £1,500–£2,000 per hectare to under £600 per hectare — while increasing resilience and, in some cases, yields.

    Including one wheat field that yielded 2 tonnes per hectare MORE after being grazed by sheep.


    Yes, really.



    🌱 What You’ll Learn in This Episode


    • Why regenerative agriculture may be LESS financially risky than conventional farming

    • How companion cropping reduces disease pressure without fungicides

    • The economics of cutting synthetic nitrogen by more than 60%

    • Why grazing sheep on standing wheat can increase yield

    • How agroforestry improves biodiversity and long-term farm resilience

    • The real psychological barriers preventing farmers from transitioning

    • Why lower input costs = lower financial risk in volatile markets

    If you care about soil health, biodiversity, food systems, climate resilience, carbon farming, or the future of sustainable agriculture — this conversation is for you.



    🐑 The Regenerative Practices James Uses Today


    • Wheat grown with clover, vetch, peas or beans

    • Legumes fixing up to 100 kg nitrogen per hectare

    • No insecticides

    • No fungicides

    • No seed treatments

    • Home-saved seed

    • Grazing sheep across winter cereals

    • Red Poll cattle mob grazing

    • 2,500+ trees planted in an agroforestry system

    • Fruit, nuts, coppice biomass & biodiversity strips

    This is regenerative agriculture in practice — not theory.



    🌍 Why This Conversation Matters


    Global food systems are under pressure:

    • Rising fertilizer costs

    • Commodity price volatility

    • Climate-driven droughts

    • Soil degradation

    • Biodiversity collapse

    James’ story shows that regeneration isn’t just environmental — it’s economic.


    As Wendell Berry said: “The soil is the great connector of lives.”

    And rebuilding it may be the smartest financial decision a farmer can make.



    👤 About James Butcher


    James Butcher is a regenerative farmer in Suffolk, UK. After starting his career in finance, he returned to his family farm and led a full-system transition toward regenerative agriculture, agroecology, livestock integration, and agroforestry.


    His work focuses on soil health, biodiversity restoration, economic resilience, and long-term farm viability.


    🌿 SOIL CAPITAL - this episode was made in partnership with Soil Capital

    www.soilcapital.com

    ❤️ Special thanks to Federica Urso who did all the research for this episode and helped me craft the questions


    Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

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    1 hr and 43 mins
  • India’s Farming Revolution Is Led by Women 🇮🇳 [NITYA RAO]
    Feb 24 2026

    What if the future of regenerative agriculture won’t be decided in Europe… but in India, Africa, and the Global South?


    In this powerful Deep Seed mini-episode, we sit down with Professor Nitya Rao, leading gender and climate researcher and contributor to the Lancet Commission on Food Systems, to explore a perspective we rarely hear in the regenerative agriculture movement.


    Because here’s the uncomfortable truth:

    👉 Many smallholder farmers in India are already farming regeneratively — not because it’s trendy, but because they have no choice.

    👉 Women are carrying entire food systems on their backs — yet remain invisible in climate policy.

    👉 And if governments don’t act wisely, the Global South may repeat the same industrial agriculture mistakes that pushed us beyond planetary boundaries.


    ⎯⎯


    🔎 In this episode, we explore:

    • Why 90% of Indian farmers cultivate less than 5 hectares — and what that means for regenerative agriculture

    • How monocultures, fertilizer subsidies, and “yield at all costs” policies affect soil health and biodiversity

    • The hidden reality of male migration and how women are sustaining farming and food systems

    • Why gender-blind climate policies fail — and what intersectionality really means in agriculture

    • The groundbreaking case of Andhra Pradesh’s community-based natural farming movement

    • Indigenous knowledge, nutrient-dense traditional foods, and ecosystem restoration

    • The biggest blind spot in the regenerative agriculture movement: evidence, economics, and social realities

    Professor Rao challenges us to ask a deeper question: "regenerative for whom?"


    Because sustainability isn’t just about carbon farming or agroecology techniques. It’s about livelihoods, labor, time, access to land, credit systems, and power dynamics.

    If we ignore that… we risk romanticizing regenerative farming instead of scaling it effectively.


    ⎯⎯


    🌱 Why This Conversation Matters

    According to the Lancet Commission, global food systems contribute nearly 30% of greenhouse gas emissions and drive transgressions of multiple planetary boundaries — from nitrogen cycles to biodiversity loss.

    The Global South stands at a crossroads.

    Should countries increase industrial agriculture to raise yields?

    Or can they leapfrog directly into nature-based solutions and sustainable farming systems that protect soil microbiology, biodiversity, and long-term food security?

    As Professor Rao says:

    “This is a very good moment for governments to say: don’t go down that track. Let’s show a different pathway.”


    ⎯⎯


    🎧 If You Care About:

    • Regenerative agriculture beyond the Western lens

    • Agroecology and smallholder farming

    • Nutrient density and sustainable diets

    • Climate resilience and food systems transformation

    • Gender equity in agriculture

    • Indigenous knowledge and ecosystem restoration

    This episode will challenge and expand your perspective.


    ⎯⎯


    🌿 SOIL CAPITAL - this episode was made in partnership with Soil Capital

    www.soilcapital.com


    ❤️ Special thanks to Federica Urso who did all the research for this episode and helped me craft the questions



    Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

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    59 mins
  • Does Regenerative Agriculture Actually Work? [LYNN DICKS]
    Feb 17 2026

    Can regenerative agriculture really restore biodiversity, rebuild soil health, increase farmer profits and still feed the world? Or is it just a powerful story we want to believe?


    In this evidence-based Deep Seed conversation, biodiversity scientist Professor Lynn Dicks shares groundbreaking real-world research from commercial farms in the UK and India — revealing what the science actually says about regenerative agriculture, agroecology, nature-based solutions, and the future of our food system.

    This episode is essential listening for farmers, policymakers, sustainability professionals, researchers, and anyone working to transform agriculture.


    🌱 What the Research Shows


    Through the UK-funded H3 Project (Healthy Soil, Healthy Food, Healthy People), Lynn and her team studied regenerative and conventional farms across England using real-world commercial data.


    They found:

    • Increased soil carbon storage

    • Improved soil health and earthworm density

    • Higher biodiversity in key beneficial species

    • Reduced synthetic fertilizer and pesticide use

    • Strong potential for increased farm resilience

    But the story is nuanced. Pollinator numbers, for example, depend heavily on landscape-scale habitat — reminding us that biodiversity restoration requires thinking beyond individual fields.


    🌍 Biodiversity vs. Productivity — A False Trade-Off?


    We explore whether sustainable farming and high productivity can coexist.


    Topics include:

    • Integrated Pest Management (IPM)

    • Ecological intensification

    • Carbon farming

    • Landscape restoration

    • Livestock systems and land use

    • Reducing chemical inputs without reducing yields

    • The true cost of food

    A global meta-analysis discussed in this episode shows farmers could reduce insecticide use by 44% without yield loss simply by spraying only when thresholds are reached.

    That’s not ideology. That’s data.


    💰 Is Regenerative Agriculture Profitable?


    Profitability determines adoption.


    Evidence from regenerative farms in the UK, US, and India shows:

    • Lower input costs

    • Reduced dependency on synthetic fertilizers and pesticides

    • Comparable yields

    • Increased resilience to market shocks

    • In some cases, significantly higher profits

    We also discuss agricultural policy reform, biodiversity net gain, nature credits, and who should pay for ecosystem services and public environmental goods.



    🔑 Soil Capital


    This episode was made in partnership with Soil Capital - accelerating the transition to regenerative agriculture by financially rewarding farmers who improve soil health and biodiversity. wwwe.soilcapital.com




    Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

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    54 mins
  • How Do We Really Scale Regenerative Agriculture? [ANDREW VOYSEY]
    Feb 3 2026

    In this episode of Deep Seed, I sit down with Andrew Voysey, Chief Impact Officer at Soil Capital, to go beyond slogans and dig into what it actually takes to scale regenerative agriculture in a world built for short-term output.


    We unpack why most farmers feel trapped, why markets alone won’t fix our food systems, and how credible impact measurement — paired with smart policy and aligned incentives — could unlock transition at scale.


    Whether you’re a farmer, a food-chain professional, a policymaker, an investor, or someone who eats food every day (which is all of us), this conversation reframes regenerative agriculture as economic reality rather than idealistic aspiration.


    In plain language and big ideas, we cover:


    • Why soil is a hidden systemic lever - and why degraded soil is behind so many global crises

    • The real reason farmers are stuck - risk, cashflow pressures, and fragile livelihoods

    • How Soil Capital is forging real economic pathways - paying farmers for measurable impact, not just good intentions

    • Why big companies actually care - resilience, supply-chain security, and risk management

    • Beyond carbon - how soil, biodiversity, water, and farm resilience can be credibly measured at scale

    • The limits of markets - why policy and public finance still matter

    • Headwinds and opportunities - political shifts, economic pressures, and the resilient core of the transition


    This is not another “optimistic farming chat.” This is a real-world, systems-level, deeply practical conversation about how change actually happens when you remove the fantasy, face the bottlenecks, and structure incentives that work.


    If you care about food, climate, landscapes, rural economies, or simply how the world actually works beneath the headlines, this episode is for you!


    🎯 Topics Covered


    Soil health, market incentives, regenerative practices, impact measurement, carbon vs. beyond carbon, agricultural economics, supply chain resilience, policy, and systems transformation.



    This episode was produced in partnership with Soil Capital, a company accelerating the regenerative transition by financially rewarding farmers who improve soil health & biodiversity.

    https://www.soilcapital.com/



    Usefull Links:

    • ANDREW VOYSEY: LinkedIn

    • SOIL CAPITAL: https://www.soilcapital.com/

    • THE DEEP SEED PODCAST - link


    Follow Us

    • Instagram: @deep_seed_podcast

    • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/deep-seed

    • Email: raphael@deepseed.eu


    Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

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    1 hr and 34 mins
  • Why the Food System is About to Collapse [TIM BENTON]
    Jan 27 2026

    Our food system is on the verge of collapse — but we can fix it.


    In this episode, we’re joined by Tim Benton, one of the world’s leading experts on food security, to unpack the deep systemic drivers behind the crisis… and what a truly regenerative future could look like.


    We cover:


    • Why the food system is fundamentally unsustainable

    • The 3 “lock-ins” keeping us stuck

    • How planetary boundaries apply to farming and diets

    • The myth of green growth

    • What gives Tim hope — and what needs to change now


    This is one of the most powerful and important episodes we’ve recorded. If you care about the future of food, farming, or the planet, you need to hear this.


    🎙️ Guest: Tim Benton - Professor of Ecology, Chatham House Research Director, and former UK Food Security Champion


    💚 Official partner: Soil Capital - a company accelerating the transition to regenerative agriculture → www.soilcapital.com


    📬 Stay connected:

    Instagram → @deep_seed_podcast

    LinkedIn → Deep Seed Podcast

    Website → www.deepseedpodcast.com


    Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

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    1 hr and 33 mins
  • True Cost of Cheap Food: How to Fix Our Broken Food System [ADELE JONES]
    Jan 20 2026

    What if every bite of cheap food you eat is secretly costing society triple the price you paid at checkout?


    In this eye-opening episode, food systems expert Adele Jones (former Executive Director of the Sustainable Food Trust) pulls back the curtain on the true cost of our food. From soil health and ecosystem collapse to diet-related disease and skyrocketing healthcare costs, Adele explains how we’re already paying the true price of industrial farming. And it’s way more than what we spend at the supermarket!


    But it’s not all bad news. Adele lays out a hopeful, inspiring roadmap to a regenerative food system where farmers are rewarded for improving soil, boosting biodiversity, and producing truly nutrient-dense food. We cover groundbreaking concepts like True Cost Accounting, the Global Farm Metric, and why livestock farming might just be part of the solution.


    If you’ve ever wondered how to fix food, protect nature, and improve public health all at once: this episode is a must-listen! It’s one of the most mind-expanding conversations we’ve ever had.


    ⎯⎯⎯


    🔍 Topics Covered

    • True Cost Accounting: the economic revolution hiding in plain sight

    • How food is much more expensive than it seems (but not at the checkout)

    • Regenerative agriculture vs. conventional farming

    • Why big food companies are (finally) waking up to soil and sustainability

    • Livestock farming: villain or ecosystem ally?

    • What if we paid farmers for nutrition per hectare instead of yield?

    • Feeding Britain regeneratively: is it possible? (Yes!)

    • Nutrient density, soil health, and the future of public health

    • Lessons from Bhutan: what a happiness-first food system looks like

    • The Global Farm Metric: a universal language for farm sustainability

    • How to make food and farming a political (and public) priority

    ⎯⎯⎯


    Official partner: Soil Capital

    -> a company accelerating the regenerative transition by financially rewarding farmers who improve soil health & biodiversity.

    https://www.soilcapital.com/


    Usefull Links:

    • ADELE JONES: https://www.linkedin.com/in/adelejones/

    • SUSTAINABLE FOOD TRUST: https://sustainablefoodtrust.org/

    • The Hidden Cost of UK FOOD - link


    Follow Us

    • Instagram: @deep_seed_podcast

    • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/deep-seed

    • Email: raphael@deepseed.eu


    Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

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    1 hr and 17 mins
  • Rewind #11 - Syntropic Agroforesty: Farming like a Forest [ANTONIO COELHO]
    Dec 18 2025

    In one of the driest, most degraded landscapes in Europe, farmer and agroforester Antonio Coelho has built 60 cm of fertile topsoil, raised organic matter to 7.4%, and slashed irrigation by 85% - all in just six years!


    In this #REWIND episode, Antonio shares his deeply inspiring journey into entropic agroforestry, a form of regenerative agriculture that mimics forest ecosystems to grow food, restore land, and rebuild water cycles. He explains how complex, layered polycultures can outcompete monocultures - not just ecologically, but economically too - if we shift how we define productivity.


    You’ll learn:


    • Why dense, multi-species systems don’t compete — they cooperate

    • How to retain water and thrive even with 8-month droughts

    • What it means to feed the soil first, not just the crop

    • Why economic models must account for real planetary costs

    • How biomass, pruning, and photosynthesis create energy loops that regenerate land over time


    This episode challenges conventional logic about competition, inputs, and profitability — and offers a bold, hopeful vision for the future of farming.


    🎧 Tune in now and see why this is Deep Seed’s most-watched episode on YouTube yet. To see Antonio’s farm and the system in action, head to our YouTube channel for the full visual experience.


    If you enjoy this episode, leave a rating or share it with someone who still thinks farming in the desert is impossible ❤️


    -


    This episode was made in partnership with Soil Capital - www.soilcapital.com



    Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

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    16 mins
  • Rewind #10 - how to bring a river BACK TO LIFE with Regenerative Agriculture [SILVIA QUARTA]
    Dec 16 2025

    What if you could bring a dead river back to life by working with farmers, not against them?


    In this powerful #REWIND episode, Silvia Quarta shares the story of a forgotten valley in one of Europe’s driest regions, where springs stopped flowing, wells ran dry, and the river disappeared. But through radical listening, community trust, and regenerative agriculture, a new vision is starting to emerge.


    Rooted in hope, soil, and local food systems.


    This episode is about reimagining what rural life can be, and showing that farmers, shepherds, and citizens can become stewards of large-scale ecological restoration.


    🌱 Topics covered:

    • Community-led ecosystem restoration

    • Water retention and soil regeneration

    • Rural resilience and land abandonment

    • Regenerative agriculture as a water solution

    • Local food systems and consumer connection

    • Working with farmers to restore landscapes

    • Building collective hope in degraded regions



    This episode was made in partnership with Soil Capital ❤️ www.soilcapital.com


    Hosted on Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

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    17 mins