For Washington’s 300 dairy farms families, being an environmental solution is about more than achieving carbon neutrality; it is a way of life. While taking care of the environment and implementing sustainable practices have been critical to a farm’s success and longevity for generations, Washington dairy farms are turning up the dial on technology and innovative farm practices to do more with less to conserve natural resources, protect wildlife habitat, and reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and the carbon footprint.
Austin Allred of Royal Dairy says, “Being a steward over the land and animals is something I take very seriously. There’s no doubt that there’s climate change. The question becomes what can we do to improve it.”
In 2016, Austin piloted a new technology from Biofiltro that uses the digestive power of worms and microbes in a biofilter to convert dirty water into irrigation-quality water in addition to creating a valuable soil amendment, which improves soil health, crop yield, and carbon sequestration. According to Biofiltro, studies have shown this process cuts GHG emissions by 91 per cent. Austin won the U.S. Dairy Outstanding Dairy Farm Sustainability Award in 2018 and today has expanded the worm beds to five acres.
“Cows are amazing. As ruminants, they can upcycle grasses, corn, and byproducts like spent grain from local breweries, bakery waste, vegetables not ‘pretty enough’ for the grocery store, and much more into milk, meat, and manure instead of those byproducts ending up in a local landfill,” he says.
In addition to upcycling byproducts, byproduct substrates also fuel local digesters on farms like Harmony Dairy in Mount Vernon.
“Our anaerobic digester takes in many food waste products that used to go to a specialised landfill. Now that food waste along with manure gets converted into enough electricity to power 750 homes. Manure is a valuable nutrient for local crop farmers – including the famous tulip fields here in the Skagit Valley – that allows them to use less commercial fertiliser since the manure provides much of the crop’s nutrient needs,” says Jason VanderKooy of Harmony Dairy.
Continuous improvement has long been a core value for dairy farmers and is evident by the 63 per cent smaller carbon footprint to produce a gallon of milk in 2007 compared to 1944. According to a University of Arkansas study, the entire dairy sector contributes only 1.9 per cent of total GHG emissions.
Dairy farms are literally doing more with less, and they could not do it without taking good care of natural resources. Each year, thousands of acres of Washington farmland is developed and taken out of production while farmers are tasked with feeding more people. In fact, dairy farms utilise 90 per cent less land and 65 per cent less water than in the 1940s while producing more milk with fewer cows. Fewer, more efficient dairy cows equal less methane – both enteric and from manure – and a smaller carbon footprint.
On Earth Day, Dairy Farmers of Washington challenged perceptions about dairy farm sustainability and dairy’s role as an environmental solution by dispelling common myths on their Facebook and Instagram pages with the help of local farmers.
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