FAS' take on Potatoes in Practice highlights a Scottish success | The Scottish Farmer

2022-09-10 03:09:28 By : Ms. Vivian Dong

Potatoes in Practice (PiP) is the largest outdoor field event for the UK potatoes sector took place in glorious sunshine early this August at the James Hutton Institute’s Balruddery Research Farm – here's the Farm Advisory Service's Kyron Maloney's take on the event:

PiP was very well attended, even though many growers would have been busy combining the early cereal harvest!

It provided a forum for all involved in potato production to showcase the innovation and development that will deliver a sustainable future for potatoes in the UK.

As in previous years, the central focus of this year’s event was the field plots. New varieties showcased by breeders are always a popular feature and there is an urgent need for varieties that both deliver for end consumers and are robust enough to stand up to pest and disease pressures.

Disease resistant varieties without a market go nowhere, but there were some promising varieties on show. Varieties that offer resistance to PCN, in particular the globodera pallida species, were especially prominent this year.

A united effort by JHI, SRUC/SAC Consulting, SASA, Scottish Agronomy, and Soil Essentials, to tackle the issue through PCN Action Scotland was a prominent presence and is starting to have a real impact in raising awareness of the treat this pest poses.

Two of the other big challenges potato growers face are spiralling costs-of-production and loss of active ingredients, both of which put a sharp focus on decision around agronomy. How to face these challenges was also on display in the field plots.

Examples included the potential for rationalised inputs; the importance of application technology and nozzle choice; and some novel precision framing tools – all of which could help with efficiency and allow growers to do more with less.

Read more: Potatoes in Practice: A world-class industry needs to be led by science

As well as the field plots, machinery demonstrations, and exhibitor stands, the seminar programme made a welcome return to the event. Ensuring co-ordination and innovation within the industry was a theme speakers kept returning to.

The best attended seminar of the day was the introduction to a new organisation for seed potato growers. The new co-operative, SPO (Seed Potato Organisation), is a grower-owned and driven effort to represent the views of seed potatoes growers across the UK.

Discussions also took place around co-ordination with GB Potatoes (a voluntary umbrella organisation, also led by growers, which will be launched soon) and SASA. Groups like this are vital for the industry’s future – they can lead coordinated representation to government, develop markets, fund innovation and technical services, and ensure the industry has an economic and environmentally sustainable future.

Innovation and coordination were also the theme of many of the other talks, and collaboration is vital across the potato sector and particularly in research and development.

SRUC and JHI already have a collaboration working to support the industry in the ScottishPotatoes.org initiative and Professor Lesley Torrance, of JHI, presented at PiP new plans to evolve this into a world leading International Potato Innovation Centre to act as a hub for cutting edge potato research that will ensure the UK industry doesn’t fall behind its competitors.

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