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In this panel session, we’re exploring one of the most practical and underused opportunities in regenerative farming and rural life: learning to see waste streams as life streams.
Across farms and villages, huge amounts of biological “waste,” offcuts, by-products, and overlooked materials are still treated as problems to be removed, when in many cases they could be transformed into fertility or new forms of value. We’ll look at where the biggest missed opportunities are, from manure and bedding to prunings, wood waste, food scraps, greywater, and more, and ask how these materials can be cycled back into living systems in ways that are realistic, affordable, and adapted to local conditions.
Just as importantly, this conversation will focus on how to make loop-closing actually work in practice. At the heart of the discussion is a bigger question: how can farms become better at turning overlooked outputs into long-term ecological and economic assets? Through concrete examples, we’ll explore what it looks like when closing loops improves not only land health, but also resilience, efficiency, and the bottom line.
By Oliver Goshey4.7
9999 ratings
In this panel session, we’re exploring one of the most practical and underused opportunities in regenerative farming and rural life: learning to see waste streams as life streams.
Across farms and villages, huge amounts of biological “waste,” offcuts, by-products, and overlooked materials are still treated as problems to be removed, when in many cases they could be transformed into fertility or new forms of value. We’ll look at where the biggest missed opportunities are, from manure and bedding to prunings, wood waste, food scraps, greywater, and more, and ask how these materials can be cycled back into living systems in ways that are realistic, affordable, and adapted to local conditions.
Just as importantly, this conversation will focus on how to make loop-closing actually work in practice. At the heart of the discussion is a bigger question: how can farms become better at turning overlooked outputs into long-term ecological and economic assets? Through concrete examples, we’ll explore what it looks like when closing loops improves not only land health, but also resilience, efficiency, and the bottom line.

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