Surveying the crisis affecting the farming sector, Alex Phillips outlines the conditions required to secure a more hopeful future.
![Regenerative farmer Hywel Morgan with his highland cattle, which graze alongside his cross shorthorn sheep on his farm Esgair Llaethdy, Llandovery, Wales. Both compliment each other because the cows eat the longer grass, whilst the sheep eat the much shorter grass. The cattle are wearing a virtual fencing GPS collar. This enables the cattle to graze on rich pastures without the need for electric fencing. They get a small shock if they roam outside the programmed radius of the supporting app.](https://www.iwa.wales/wp-content/media/WW1228470.jpg)
is WWF Cymru’s Policy and Advocacy Officer specialising in Welsh nature restoration.
Surveying the crisis affecting the farming sector, Alex Phillips outlines the conditions required to secure a more hopeful future.
Greater investment in Wales’ natural ecosystems can ensure we meet our climate targets as well as maximise additional social and economic benefits, writes Alex Phillips.