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A chat with Dimitri Tsitos from AgroSystemic

# | July 2024

min

Published January 2026

A chat with Dimitri Tsitos from AgroSystemic

Hey everyone! Ready for another episode of What The Field?! This time, we had the incredible Dimitri Tsitos join us, and let me tell you, it was a conversation you don’t want to miss. Fun fact: Dimitri and I went to the same university, and he speaks a bunch of languages!

Dimitri is the co-founder of AgroSystemic, whose mission is to provide the tools to facilitate the regenerative transition in the Mediterranean basin, with a special focus on tree crops. It’s all about de-risking the transition for farmers. Dimitri brought a fresh perspective to the table. He reminded us that the conversation around regenerative farming shouldn’t be about pointing fingers at large-scale industrial farmers or the Big Agriculture industry. Instead, it’s about making sure everybody is part of the conversation and that change is happening on all levels. 

When farmers see how regenerative practices can improve their yield and benefit the environment, they become the biggest champions for change.Our chat left us feeling optimistic, challenged and inspired to carry on in our vision of a world where regenerative farming is the norm, not the exception. To get there, we need policies that support these practices, financial incentives, and a shift in how consumers think about their food.

Catch the full episode here, and let’s keep the conversation going. Together, we can foster a farming community that’s informed, and committed to the health of our soil, our people, and our planet.


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See you next time on What The Field?!

Written by Emilia Aguirre

Emilia Aguirre

Emilia Aguirre est notre spécialiste Sensibilisation & Plaidoyer — ce qui veut dire qu’elle passe ses journées à poser des questions qui dérangent sur la façon dont notre alimentation est cultivée, fixée en prix, étiquetée et vendue. Elle anime What The Field?!, un podcast rempli d’histoires de terrain, de recherches percutantes et de conversations avec celles et ceux qui façonnent l’avenir de l’alimentation (qu’ils le veuillent ou non).

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48 min

Why Regenerative Agriculture makes business sense

#308 | December 2025

What if the future of farming was not only better for biodiversity and soil health, but also a smarter long-term investment? In this episode of What The Field?!, we sit down with Alessia Lenders, Head of Impact at SLM Partners, a pioneering investment firm proving that ecological farming and solid financial performance can go hand in hand. Alessia’s journey into regenerative agriculture did not begin in the fields but in the world of traditional finance. Searching for investment solutions that could genuinely improve biodiversity, she found herself returning again and again to agriculture: one of the biggest drivers of environmental degradation, but also one of the greatest opportunities for change. Today, SLM Partners manages more than 760 million dollars in farmland and forestland across the United States, Australia and Europe. Their approach is simple yet radical: invest in land, partner with skilled farmers, and scale regenerative systems that rebuild soil, protect water and secure long-term productivity. What you will discover in this episode 1. The economic logic behind regenerative agriculture Alessia explains why long-term, patient capital fits naturally with regenerative transitions: healthier soils, more diverse revenue streams (including carbon projects in Australia) and more climate-resilient farms. Far from being a financial compromise, regenerative systems can improve profitability by reducing input costs, stabilising yields and tapping into premium and organic markets. 2. Why investors are turning to farmland Farmland behaves differently from stocks and bonds, which makes it an attractive diversifier for institutional investors. SLM adds another layer: regenerative farms that can outperform conventional systems over the long term while delivering measurable environmental impact. 3. The crucial role of the farmer SLM’s model is farmer first. They partner with experienced growers who want to expand but lack the capital to acquire land. SLM buys the land, the farmer manages it and both commit to a regenerative transition adapted to local realities. The result is a partnership that supports young farmers, protects landscapes and proves that ecological agriculture can scale. 4. A clearer picture through data From soil microbiology to water modelling, biodiversity indicators and carbon estimates, SLM collects an extraordinary amount of data to understand and communicate how landscapes change over time. This allows them to build business models that anticipate droughts, evaluate water security and verify real ecological outcomes. 5. Regenerative agriculture is not one size fits all Whether transitioning almond orchards in Spain, grasslands in Australia or mixed farms in the United States, SLM adapts regenerative principles to each context. For some farms, the target is organic certification. For others, it is a regenerative outcome-based approach focused on soil health, biodiversity and long-term resilience. This episode goes deeper than we ever have into the financial mechanics behind regenerative agriculture. It is a rare look at how capital, ecology and farming come together to build food systems that work for both people and the planet. If you have ever wondered whether regenerative agriculture really adds up financially, ecologically or both, this is the conversation you will not want to miss.  

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