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Nestlé announces a new partnership to build farmland resilience through training and knowledge exchange

A landscape picture of a farm in springtime, next to an in-bloom meadow.
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Nestlé UK and Ireland has announced a new partnership with The Allerton Project, a research farm in Leicestershire with an award-winning blueprint for future rural landscapes. 

For more than 30 years, The Allerton Project has been at the cutting edge of research into sustainable farming methods, biodiversity and habitat creation.

The partnership is promising for Nestlé UK and Ireland as it provides an opportunity for farmers and suppliers of Nestlé to receive practical, context-based land management advice to deliver positive environmental outcomes on their land.  

In recognition of Nestlé’s dependence on agriculture and the need for more understanding of the challenges and opportunities faced by the sector, The Allerton Project will also provide a mix of immersive, field-based training with classroom-based content to managers and executive-level staff to further embed perspectives on supply chain resilience within Nestlé’s working culture and the integral part it plays in Nestlé’s operations. 

A programme of farm visits and technical workshops will also be offered to farmers participating in Nestlé’s agricultural programmes, including Landscape Enterprise Networks (LENs). LENs is a trading network that brings together a diverse range of land-dependent businesses with farmers to collectively, and equitably address issues of landscape resilience and performance.  It is important to Nestlé that diverse farming networks can learn from one another and introduce practical, regenerative farming practices to help build and restore landscapes.  

Allerton’s unique approach to research into sustainable farm and landscape management has made a significant contribution to policymaking and a long-term history of welcoming senior policy makers to discuss research at Allerton. Its research team collaborate with other research organisations and have successfully co-supervised numerous PhD and MSc projects.  

Matt Ryan, Regeneration Lead at Nestlé UK and Ireland, has said: “Our partnership with The Allerton Project represents an important opportunity to move closer to our regenerative ambitions as a business and to build resilience into farming Despite our global reach, unlocking the huge potential of regenerative agriculture lies in local, and context-based actions. This partnership not only promises to provide a platform for training and knowledge exchange amongst famers and suppliers, but also a common space for key decision makers within our organisation to understand the practical realities and barriers to a genuine transition to lower impact, nature-friendly production within our supply chain.”  

 Alice Midmer, Assistant Manager at The GWCT Allerton Project, has said: “We are really pleased to be working with Nestlé to help them realise their regenerative farming ambitions. It is so encouraging to be working with a big business, with big ideas who are totally committed to delivering it at every level of their supply chain. We are excited to be working with their managers and executive level staff, farmers and suppliers as well as businesses involved and engaged with the LENS programme. We are delighted to be utilising our thirty years of practical, data-led experience in more sustainable farming and land management to help Nestlé and its supply chain deliver for food and the environment. For change to happen, we need to work together and this will be a working example of that - what an opportunity!" 


Notes to Editors   

The Allerton Project researches the effects of different farming methods on wildlife and the environment, sharing results of our research through advisory and educational activities. This is undertaken on our 320 hectare demonstration farm based in Leicestershire, United Kingdom. 

We identify management that delivers multiple benefits for our rural landscape. Our work covers natural capital accounting, agri-environment schemes and regenerative farming systems. From soil and water, to woodland and environmental habitat that increases biodiversity, our aim is to build farmland resilience. Our own research team collaborate with other research organisations and help co-supervise numerous PhD and MSc projects. 

Visitors to the project include businesses, policy makers, non-government organisations, regulators, farmers, advisors, students and schools. We have several initiatives that involve the local community to help improve a shared understanding of agricultural and environmental issues. 

Commercial farming and environmental rejuvenation will be successful with considered policy and interventions from those that manage our countryside. In essence, The Allerton Project is an award winning, pioneering blueprint for future rural landscapes.