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Ideas prácticas y pruebas para sanar los ecosistemas, fortalecer los ingresos de los agricultores y reducir las emisiones, un paisaje a la vez.

La agricultura regenerativa como solución escalable para el clima y la naturaleza

  • Writer: Sustainable Agriculture Network
    Red de Agricultura Sostenible
  • 29 de diciembre de 2025
  • 4 minutos de lectura

Why Regenerative Agriculture Matters Now

Agriculture stands at a crossroads. It must feed a growing global population, adapt to a changing climate, and reduce its environmental footprint — all at once. Few sectors face such overlapping demands. Regenerative agriculture has emerged in this context not as a trend, but as a response to systemic failure in conventional food systems.


At its core, regenerative agriculture seeks to restore ecological function while sustaining productivity and livelihoods. It emphasizes soil health, biodiversity, water cycles, and resilience. But its real importance lies not in individual practices, but in its potential to operate at scale — delivering climate mitigation, nature recovery, and farmer resilience together.



Beyond Definitions: Regeneration as a Systems Shift

Regenerative agriculture is often misunderstood as a fixed set of practices or a return to the past. In reality, it represents a systems shift. It moves agriculture away from extractive models — where productivity is achieved by depleting soils, simplifying ecosystems, and relying heavily on external inputs — toward systems that work with biological processes.


This shift is context-specific. Regeneration looks different across crops, regions, and cultures. What unites regenerative approaches is not uniformity, but intent: rebuilding soil organic matter, increasing biological diversity, closing nutrient cycles, and strengthening resilience to climate shocks.


Treating regeneration as a rigid checklist risks turning it into another label. Treating it as a system-level transition opens the door to real impact.


A Climate Solution Arraigado en Land

Agriculture is both a contributor to climate change and one of the few sectors capable of removing carbon from the atmosphere. Regenerative agriculture unlocks this potential by restoring soils and perennial vegetation — some of the planet’s largest carbon reservoirs.


Healthy soils store more carbon, retain more water, and support more life. Practices such as diversified rotations, cover cropping, reduced disturbance, agroforestry, and managed grazing can significantly increase soil carbon while reducing emissions from fertilizers and inputs. These outcomes are not theoretical; they are observed across diverse geographies when regeneration is implemented well.


Crucially, regenerative agriculture links mitigation and adaptation. Carbon-rich soils are more productive under stress, buffering crops against droughts, floods, and heat. In a warming world, resilience is as valuable as reduction.


Regeneration as a Nature-Positive Pathway

Biodiversity loss and climate change are deeply intertwined. Regenerative agriculture addresses both by rebuilding complexity in landscapes that have been simplified over decades.


By increasing crop diversity, restoring habitat, improving soil biology, and reconnecting farms with surrounding ecosystems, regenerative systems support pollinators, beneficial insects, soil organisms, and wildlife. These ecological gains, in turn, strengthen productivity and stability.


Nature-positive outcomes are not side benefits of regeneration — they are core to its function. Systems that depend on biodiversity to regulate pests, cycle nutrients, and maintain fertility are inherently more resilient than those that rely on chemical substitution.


Farmers at the Center of Regeneration

Regenerative agriculture succeeds only when it works for farmers. Transitions require time, knowledge, investment, and risk-taking. Farmers must manage uncertainty as systems shift and benefits accrue gradually.


When regeneration improves soil health, reduces input dependency, stabilizes yields, and opens access to new markets or incentives, it strengthens farm livelihoods. When it is imposed without support, it can increase risk and inequality.


Scaling regeneration therefore depends on aligning incentives, sharing risk, and recognizing farmers as partners and innovators — not just adopters of prescribed practices.


Why Scale Is the Defining Challenge

Regenerative agriculture will only matter for climate and nature if it moves beyond pilot projects. Small successes are valuable, but insufficient. The defining challenge of the next decade is scale — across hectares, supply chains, and landscapes.


Scaling does not mean standardization. It means building systems that can adapt regeneration principles to local realities while maintaining credibility and measurable outcomes. It requires coordination across farmers, companies, investors, and governments, as well as robust data to track progress.


Without scale, regeneration risks remaining fragmented. With scale, it becomes one of the most powerful tools available for transforming food systems.


From Ideology to Credible Impacto

As interest in regenerative agriculture grows, so does the risk of dilution. Vague claims, inconsistent definitions, and unverified outcomes undermine credibility. For regeneration to deliver climate and nature outcomes at scale, it must be grounded in evidence, transparency, and continuous improvement.


This does not mean reducing regeneration to a single metric. It means measuring what matters — soil health, emissions, biodiversity, resilience, and farmer well-being — in ways that are credible and fit for decision-making.


Credibility is what allows regenerative agriculture to move from aspiration to investable, scalable action.


Conclusion: Regeneration as a Strategic Imperative

Regenerative agriculture is not a silver bullet. But it is one of the few approaches capable of addressing climate change, biodiversity loss, and farmer livelihoods together. Its strength lies in integration — linking ecological health with economic viability.


In the coming decade, the question is not whether regenerative agriculture will be part of the solution, but whether it will be supported, scaled, and verified in ways that deliver real outcomes. Done well, regeneration can help transform agriculture from a driver of environmental degradation into a cornerstone of climate and nature resilience.


Acerca de la Red de Agricultura Sostenible

The Red de Agricultura Sostenible (RAS)es una red de impacto global que transforma la agricultura en una fuerza positiva, sanando y nutriendo nuestro extraordinario planeta. Junto con 37 organizaciones miembros en más de 120 países, avances de SAN sistemas agrícolas sostenibles, equitativos y resilientes al climaque empoderan a las comunidades y restauran la naturaleza.


A través de una colaboración radical, SAN conecta a agricultores, empresas, investigadores y la sociedad civil para cocrear soluciones que aborden los desafíos más urgentes del mundo, desde El cambio climático y la pérdida de biodiversidad provocan inequidad socialLos esfuerzos colectivos de nuestra red ya han ayudado a transformar más de 40 millones de hectáreas de tierras agrícolas, impulsando un progreso mensurable hacia sistemas alimentarios regenerativos e inclusivos.


Arraigado en integridad, inclusión, curiosidad, empatía, adaptabilidad y acción basada en evidenciaSAN lidera con urgencia y esperanza. Visualizamos un futuro donde la agricultura cura, las comunidades prosperan y la naturaleza florece.


Obtenga más información en es.sustainableagriculture.eco

 
 
 

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