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Next articleVolgend Artikel

 11 sep 2014 14:15 

First Bayer ForwardFarm launched in Belgium


Bayer CropScience has inaugurated the first Bayer ForwardFarm in the Belgian town of Huldenberg. The "Hof ten Bosch" farm owned by Jan and Josse Peeters brings together farmers, scientists and academia, technology partners and other players throughout the value chain, politics and regulators, as well as consumers, with the goals of exchanging agricultural know-how and forming partnerships to jointly promote the important role of agriculture in society.

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Interview Birgitt Walz-Tylla (47.6 Kb) Interview Dirk Baets and Marc Sneyders (48.3 Kb) Interview Jan en Josse Peeters (45.5 Kb)

"There has to be a balance between raising agricultural productivity while protecting biodiversity and maintaining our responsibility to the community. Since joining the Bayer ForwardFarming initiative, we have benefited from a broad range of innovative solutions that enable us to manage the challenges of sustainable farming," said farm owner Josse Peeters at the inauguration ceremony. "The collaboration with the dedicated Bayer team has been very enriching for us and has opened our eyes to a number of new approaches."

"We approached the Peeters family because of the long heritage of their farm, the multitude of potential projects and their willingness to look beyond conventional solutions," explained Marc Sneyders, Head of Bayer Marketing & Sustainable Development in Belgium. "At Hof ten Bosch, we are able to put our ideas into practice, under realistic circumstances, in collaboration with real farmers. This unique approach should help us give today’s agriculture the sustainable impetus it needs," explained Carsten Dauster, Head of Bayer CropScience in Benelux. 

"Our aim is to bring our Bayer ForwardFarming initiative, with its combination of integrated crop solutions, proactive stewardship and partnerships, to other countries worldwide starting in Europe," added Dr. Birgitt Walz-Tylla, Head of Sustainability & Business Stewardship at Bayer CropScience.

Knowledge platform Bayer ForwardFarming

Bayer CropScience is convinced that sustainable agriculture requires a holistic approach to strengthen farmers’ livelihoods and conserve natural resources today and in future.

Bayer ForwardFarming is a knowledge platform for sustainable agricultural practices, designed to further stimulate the dialog within the industry and beyond. Today’s agriculture is faced with numerous challenges: the increasing demand for food as a result of the continuously growing world population, the decline in available arable land, limited natural resources and climate change. Bayer CropScience is convinced that the answer lies in an integrated concept for sustainable agriculture that takes into account a number of economical, ecological and societal criteria.

"But farming is not just about producing our daily food. It is also about profitability and securing farmers’ incomes, because they are important economic players, especially in rural areas. And it is about the responsible management of natural resources such as water and soil," Walz-Tylla added.

The initiative applied to Hof ten Bosch is built upon three basic elements: integrated crop solutions - the combination of high value seeds and chemical and biological crop protection; proactive stewardship to ensure the safe and efficient use of crop protection products for both the user and the environment; and partnerships.

Hof ten Bosch: demonstrating sustainable agriculture in practice

The Hof ten Bosch farm, located 15 kilometers away from Brussels, was built in the 13th century and has been farmed by the Peeters family since 1890. Its approximately 150 hectares are used to grow potatoes, wheat, sugar beet, corn, and apples and pears.

The wide range of projects on Hof ten Bosch is focused on providing innovative solutions for current issues that Belgian agriculture has to deal with. Due to the hilly areas surrounding Hof ten Bosch, erosion is one of the main problems in the potato fields. A new system to make cross-borders in these fields was tested, proved to be efficient and has now been fully implemented at the farm. This helps to avoid run-off of crop protection products beyond the field. As ameasure to protect surface water, a Phytobac™ system has been installed which allows the retention and microbial degradation of crop protection ingredients in waste water effluents derived from filling, cleaning and washing spray equipment. The farm employs the latest technical solutions for precision farming.

An advanced weather station tells the farmers when the disease pressure in their crops is increasing and high-tech GPS systems on the tractors allow them to apply crop protection products to a precision of 2 cm. To stimulate biodiversity, flowering strips, mixed hedges, bee hotels and nesting places for birds have been placed around the orchards and acres as a part of integrated crop management (ICM) and integrated pest management (IPM).



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