The Cool Farm Tool (CFT) was created by the University of Aberdeen in partnership with Unilever and the Sustainable Food Lab to guide farmers over their greenhouse gas emissions and to provide tips on how they might lessen their environmental impacts.
The computer-based tool - also aimed at processors and retailers with sustainability schemes - has already been successfully used by a number of market leaders including PepsiCo, Marks and Spencer and Costco.
CFT has also been widely piloted by farmers who have helped guide refinements and improvements of the updated version of CFT being launched this week.
The Cool Farm Tool Institute is a new virtual organisation with the mission of helping farmers and those businesses they supply make informed on-farm decision to reduce their environmental impact.
Although in the first phase it will primarily serve as a vehicle to distribute and support the use of CFT, it will also collate data and case studies to provide advice on best environmental practice for farmers.
CFT was developed by Dr Jon Hillier and Professor Pete Smith of the Environmental Modelling Group at the University of Aberdeen. The group has a global reputation and influence, with Professor Smith being the convening lead author for the mitigation chapter of several Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Assessment Reports and Science Director of Scotland's ClimateXChange.
Dr Hillier said: “The Cool Farm Tool is really easy to use and has been tested on real farms and within real companies.
“The open-source tool can be downloaded from the website of the new Cool Farm Tool Institute for free. The farmer or grower then enters their own data on how they are managing their crops or livestock such as; the kind and quantities of fertiliser they are using, livestock feed, and energy used in field machinery operation, animal housing, and on-site storage or processing.
“The tool then provides a tailored emissions profile and suggests likely beneficial mitigation options, such as the use of more efficient fertilisers, using different technologies, better soil carbon management, or looking again at the energy they are using for storage.
“Emissions from agricultural production are difficult to quantify due to geographic variability and differences in practice between land users.
“Many retailers and processors have ambitious sustainability programmes but have no means to calculate on-farm emissions which limits their understanding of prevalent practices or opportunities for introducing change.
“Cool Farm Tool is a farmer-friendly greenhouse gas calculator which will allow estimation of a greenhouse gas footprint within minutes, and then provides the opportunity to test and compare other more sustainable options.”
Dr Hillier added: “Cool Farm Tool will be available via the Cool Farm Institute which has been founded with the initial support of PepsiCo, Unilever, Marks and Spencer, Tesco and Yara. The institute fundamentally believes that more can be achieved by collaboration with and across industry; working together to share methods, knowledge and findings.”
*Some examples of CFT users:
· PepsiCo have embedded the Cool Farm Tool in their 50-in-5 target - reducing carbon emissions and water use by 50% in five years. They have used the software on more than 80 UK potato farms this year for Walkers crisps, which has lead to benchmarking and the development of carbon action plans, both for the organisation and for individual farmers. PepsiCo plan to expand to other crops within their Quaker Oats and Copella brands. “I like the [Cool Farm Tool] because it’s not a black box. With other tools you can’t do the what-if scenarios. You just pay for the study and are delivered the results. This is a better way of engaging farmers and helping them to prioritize options. Other tools we've used give generic mitigation options copied and pasted from elsewhere and don't always apply to the particular farm in question. ” Mark Pettigrew, Pepsico
For more information see: http://www.coolfarmtool.org/
Issued by the Communications Team, Office of External Affairs, University of Aberdeen, King's College, Aberdeen. Tel: (01224) 272014.
Issued on: 02 May 2012
Ref: 131CFT
Contact: Jennifer Phillips