Farmers say their sustainability efforts are being ignored 

New research highlights a growing disconnect between farmers and the wider food supply chain, with 92% saying their sustainability efforts go unrecognised.

New research highlights a growing disconnect between farmers and the wider food supply chain, with 92% saying their sustainability efforts go unrecognised.
Specialist agricultural PR agency Pinstone launched the first report from its new insights platform, Pinstone Pulse, during a live webinar panel discussion. L-R: Beth Dixon, associate director, Rebecca Morgan, associate director, Ben Briggs, associate director, Hannah Lloyd, director of sales and marketing Helen Maiden, director of HR and operations.

Despite this, the research shows that 61% of farmers are willing to make significant changes to how their businesses operate while already implementing an average of eight sustainable practices on the farm. 

The findings come from Pinstone Pulse, a new insight tracker from specialist PR and communications agency Pinstone. 

Catherine Linch, managing director at Pinstone, said that the research shows on-farm sustainability progress risks being overlooked – widening the disconnect between farmers, policymakers and the supply chain.  

“We know sustainability expectations are increasing, but our first Pinstone Pulse report, From Pressure to Partnership, highlights that the reality is what’s being delivered on-farm is often overlooked,” she said. 

According to the report, the biggest barriers to progress are the conflicting policies, the costs to implement new practices and that too much jargon is used around sustainability, with some key terms proving very polarising.  

“Definitions and policies have become broader and more fragmented, creating expectations that are difficult for farmers to plan and invest against,” Mrs Linch explained. 

“The findings also highlight how important language is and the way we communicate on these important issues if we are to engage with farmers effectively so they feel part of the conversation.”   

‘Widening gap between ambition and action’

Catherine Linch, managing director at Pinstone
Catherine Linch, managing director at Pinstone.

Mrs Linch added: “Farmers aren’t resistant to change; they’re resistant to being asked to change if they don’t feel that ‘ask’ is coming from a place of understanding, and when there’s no tangible reward or support to match it. 

“The research exposes a widening gap between ambition and action. The pace of expectation has outstripped the pace of support. 

“Farmers are ready to act, but the economics and profitability remain central to their decision-making processes.” 

The report also shows that 85% of farmers would go further to run a more sustainable farm with the right financial support, but trust remains a major challenge.  

Just 5% of farmers trust the government as a credible voice on sustainability, raising questions about how policy-led change can be effectively delivered. 

“The message from farmers is clear – sustainability is already happening on-farm, but it’ll only accelerate if policymakers and the supply chain build greater trust and demonstrate economic viability while speaking the right language,” Mrs Linch concluded. 

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