A North Yorkshire village is home to an ‘autonomous field’ trial being carried out by M&S and long-term supplier Huntapac Produce to farm lower-carbon, higher quality parsnips.

Swapping standard growing practices for the latest technology to farm with a significantly lower environmental impact and improve crop quality and yield; the trial involves two robots for bed forming, planting and weeding, two different types of drones to monitor and maintain crop health and the latest scientific testing on soil health and carbon impact.

Huntapac, a family-owned farming business has worked with M&S for over 40 years and oversees a network of farmers growing product nationwide.

The company has a dedicated base in Holme-on-Spalding-Moor in the East Riding of Yorkshire and in March this year, chose Sherburn, as the location for the trial due to its sandy, well-draining soil, which provides ideal growing conditions for helping achieve a smooth skin finish on the parsnips.

The parsnips will be available in selected M&S stores throughout November, including 11 stores across Yorkshire.

During the trial, the Huntapac team adopted a minimum till approach to help keep carbon locked into the soil and used a green fertiliser, alongside the new technology which uses significantly less diesel than a traditional tractor to reduce carbon emissions. AI was also used to monitor and improve crop health. Initial data shows a 46% carbon reduction compared to standard methods.

The new technology is expected to create more highly skilled jobs for the sector and attract new talent, if rolled out more widely. It also helped to reduce the weather impact this year. In March, following the wettest six months in England since 1871, the Huntapac team were able to plant the field with the autonomous robot which wouldn’t have been possible with a traditional tractor. This has helped deliver a 16% higher yield of grade one vegetables compared to Huntapac’s other parsnip fields.

The trial was the first M&S Food project to be funded by the M&S Plan A Net Zero accelerator fund, which the retailer launched to find innovation projects to enable rapid action towards net zero to meet its Plan A goal of being a Net Zero business across its entire supply chain by 2040.

Andrew Clappen, Technical Director at M&S Food, said: “Innovation is at the heart of M&S Food and our Plan A Accelerator Fund offers us the opportunity to tap into the entrepreneurial spirit of our suppliers. Projects like this help us move towards being a Net Zero business across all our operations and entire supply chain by 2040, whilst focussing on the quality of produce that M&S is famous for.

Agriculture is one of our biggest contributors to emissions, so it’s important that we find new lower impact farming methods. Trialling new ways to support our Plan A roadmap to Net Zero is an important step on the journey and this project has helped deliver more parsnips at M&S quality, a carbon reduction and brings together new technologies which if adopted more widely would create more highly skilled jobs and attract new talent into the sector.”

Stephen Shields, Technical & Sustainability Director who has worked at Huntapac for 18 years, said: “Our 40-year relationship with M&S has gone from strength to strength and we couldn’t have done this project without the Plan A Accelerator Fund. At Huntapac, we are always looking to adopt new innovations and technologies, so working with a leading retailer such as M&S and having access to the find has been amazing. It has allowed us to adopt new innovations, speeding up project timelines compared to if we were to fund them ourselves.

Not only are we seeing a reduction of the carbon impact, but we’re also harvesting more parsnips at higher quality, due to us being able to plant the seeds despite bad weather earlier this year. This will have a fantastic impact on our business at scale and we’re aiming to deliver multiple fields farmed this way for next season.”