
April Business Update: SRUC
After two years of operation as a Limited Company, Agrecalc became part of Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC) as of 1 April 2025.
An online tool which has helped thousands of UK farms to reduce their carbon footprint has won a major industry award.
Scotland’s Rural College beat entries from Volvo Group and the Scottish Government’s Low Carbon Infrastructure Transition Programme to top the Low Carbon and Energy category at the inaugural Centre for Engineering Education and Development (CeeD) Industry Awards in Glasgow.
SRUC’s Agricultural Resource Efficiency Calculator (Agrecalc) determines resource use and greenhouse gas emissions for the whole farm, per enterprise and per unit of saleable product.
Once emissions and resource use are broken down by enterprise, experts from SRUC’s commercial division, SAC Consulting, are then able to identify weaknesses, make comparisons and offer advice on reducing carbon footprints and saving money.
Senior Rural Business Consultant Julian Bell, who helped to create Agrecalc, said: “We are delighted to receive recognition from the industry for something that is the culmination of 12 years of hard work by staff across SRUC.
“We have now delivered Agrecalc carbon footprints to more than 2,000 UK farms. Farmers are very interested in improving the sustainability of their businesses but the complexity of environmental interactions and global supply chains can make this hard to manage.
“That is why SRUC has developed Agrecalc and why we strive to make the tool as user friendly and practical as we can. If you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it, and this holds true as much for the farm’s environmental impact as it does for its finances.”
"Farmers are very interested in improving the sustainability of their businesses, but the complexity of environmental interactions and global supply chains can make this hard to manage. That is why SRUC has developed Agrecalc and why we strive to make the tool as user friendly and practical as we can."
Julian Bell, Senior Rural Business Consultant
Joe Pacitti, Managing Director of CeeD (Centre for Engineering Education and Development), said: “SRUC submitted a winning application which provided a solution focussed on the challenges faced by carbon emissions in the agricultural sector and which the judges felt encapsulated the focus of making an impact across a wide number of businesses.”
After two years of operation as a Limited Company, Agrecalc became part of Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC) as of 1 April 2025.
Biochar is a carbon-rich material produced by pyrolysing biomass, which offers a variety of potential agronomic benefits. In this guest article, Black Bull Biochar discusses how these effects work together to bolster productivity, sustainability, and resilience in farming.
The Agrecalc team is looking forward to welcoming you at our stand (2.844) at this year’s Low Carbon Agriculture Show, taking place on March 5 and 6, at NAEC Stoneleigh near Kenilworth.