What is regenerative agriculture? - The World Economic Forum Regenerative farmers and networks are growing regenerative agriculture globally Regeneration International lists a network of partners across Asia, Latin America, the United States, Canada, Africa, Europe, Australia and New Zealand
Regenerative business: a roadmap for rapid change - The World Economic . . . Beyond simply managing forests, a regenerative approach also seeks to enhance resilience through local biodiversity conservation and procurement practices that restore and replenish World Wildlife Fund’s Global Forest Trade Network (GTFN) is one of the most forward-thinking efforts for saving the world's valuable and threatened forests
How regenerative agriculture builds resilient climate solutions Regenerative practices can sequester carbon, improve water retention and boost biodiversity The upcoming Conferences of the Parties to the conventions on biodiversity, climate change and desertification in late 2024 are opportunities to promote regenerative agriculture globally and unite actors across the value chain to support farmers
We must regenerate the future for a second chance on Earth Only a regenerative economy can build sustainable, inclusive prosperity Regenerative organizations learn new patterns beyond sustainability and circularity towards a caretaking, net-positive effect on humans and Earth The process of making regeneration the social norm cannot be achieved without mutual learning across generations
What is regenerative capitalism? | World Economic Forum Regenerative capitalism, a notion coined by John Fullerton in 2015, or in PepsiCo’s case regenerative farming, refers to business practices that restore and build rather than exploit and destroy Regenerative is about viewing the goal of net-zero carbon emissions as a stop-off on the longer journey to create the conditions for life to
Delivering regenerative agriculture through digitalization and AI . . . The key principles of regenerative agriculture emphasize minimizing soil disturbance through reduced tillage and keeping the soil covered with crops or residues year-round It also promotes increasing plant diversity through crop rotation and cover crops, and gradually reduces synthetic inputs over time
Regenerative design: urban spaces for people and the planet A better framing might be, does the regenerative design project act as a catalyst for more broadly-based regenerative urbanism? This approach considers the importance of scale across time and place Ecosystems operate at the scale of watersheds Social and cultural dynamics are the result of long histories and far-reaching factors
Lets talk about regenerative business not sustainability However, the priority now must be to move on from making regenerative gestures, to putting the idea of being regenerative at the core of every business strategy In this way, the end goal is a regenerative economy, where systemic change has caused a fundamental shift in how businesses impact people and the planet
Why businesses are moving from sustainability to regeneration Specifically, regenerative firms seek to boost the health and vitality of people, places and the planet simultaneously in a synergistic manner In doing so, there is a growing body of evidence to suggest that regenerative businesses can achieve far better financial performance and impact than their sustainability-focused peers
How we can unlock the potential of regenerative agriculture Companies are, therefore, eager to leverage regenerative agriculture practices as a two-in-one solution for managing their carbon and biodiversity impacts Regenerative agriculture is still emerging and appeals to companies across sectors and geographies, from Nestlé to PepsiCo to Carlsberg and many more