agricultural consultancy banner

News

agricultural land banner

News

agricultural lawyers banner

News

agricultural spares banner

News

agricultural buildings banner

News

livestock banner

News

Cope Seeds adds Terravesta AthenaTM to its portfolio

6th September 2021

In an industry first, Cope Seeds and Grain is partnering with Miscanthus specialist, Terravesta, to market its rhizome hybrid Terravesta Athena.

The new opportunity has been launched to help support the growing need to decarbonise the UK economy with bio-based solutions and fits with Cope Seeds regenerative and organic portfolio.

We work with organic and regenerative farmers, and believe Miscanthus is part of a wide mix of solutions to help store carbon, enhance biodiversity and improve soils on less productive land, explains Gemma Clarke, Cope Seeds director.

This new partnership extends our offering to growers, and will support the need to decarbonise agriculture, to reach net zero by 2050, adds Gemma.

Miscanthus is a long-term perennial crop suited to less productive fields and farmers can now benefit from a finance package from Oxbury Bank to remove virtually all upfront costs of establishment as well as new direct, long-term offtake agreements with end-users, to deliver 10-15-year index-linked annual returns.

Alex Robinson, Terravestas chief operating officer is pleased to be working with Cope Seeds. Cope Seeds is a fellow Lincolnshire-based business operating all over the UK, and prioritises regenerative crop varieties suited to agroecological, low input or organic systems.

The addition of Terravesta AthenaTM to the Cope Seeds portfolio is a milestone for Terravesta, where Miscanthus sits alongside arable varieties, as a key part of the climate change solution, but not competing with food production.

Earlier this year, Terravesta published the first dedicated study into the Miscanthus carbon life-cycle. It shows the crop to be net carbon negative, capturing net 0.64 tonnes of carbon (2.35 tonnes of CO2e) per hectare, per year in the soil, at the very least, says Alex.

Terravesta AthenaTMgenerally takes its first harvest in year two and reaches maturity faster thanMiscanthus giganteus, and some of our growers are reporting a first harvest of eight tonnes per hectare, going onto a mature yield of between 10 -17 tonnes per hectare depending on the soil type, adds Alex.

Interested farmers can contact Cope Seeds to learn more by emailinggemma@copeseeds.co.ukor calling+44 (0) 1529 421081.

Your login details have been used by another user or machine. Login details can only be used once at any one time so you have therefore automatically been logged out. Please contact your sites administrator if you believe this other user or machine has unauthorised access.