School of Water, Energy & Environment, Cranfield University, Cranfield, MK43 0AL, UK.
School of Agriculture, Food and Environment, Royal Agricultural University, Cirencester, GL7 6JS, UK.
Nat Commun. 2019 Oct 22;10(1):4641. doi: 10.1038/s41467-019-12622-7.
Agriculture is a major contributor to global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and must feature in efforts to reduce emissions. Organic farming might contribute to this through decreased use of farm inputs and increased soil carbon sequestration, but it might also exacerbate emissions through greater food production elsewhere to make up for lower organic yields. To date there has been no rigorous assessment of this potential at national scales. Here we assess the consequences for net GHG emissions of a 100% shift to organic food production in England and Wales using life-cycle assessment. We predict major shortfalls in production of most agricultural products against a conventional baseline. Direct GHG emissions are reduced with organic farming, but when increased overseas land use to compensate for shortfalls in domestic supply are factored in, net emissions are greater. Enhanced soil carbon sequestration could offset only a small part of the higher overseas emissions.
农业是全球温室气体(GHG)排放的主要贡献者,必须在减排努力中发挥作用。有机农业可能通过减少农业投入和增加土壤碳固存来对此做出贡献,但也可能通过在其他地方增加粮食生产来弥补较低的有机产量,从而加剧排放。迄今为止,还没有在国家范围内对这种潜力进行严格评估。在这里,我们使用生命周期评估来评估英格兰和威尔士 100%转向有机食品生产对净温室气体排放的影响。我们预测,与传统基准相比,大多数农产品的产量将大幅下降。与有机农业相比,直接温室气体排放减少,但当考虑到为弥补国内供应短缺而增加的海外土地使用时,净排放量更大。增强的土壤碳固存只能抵消海外更高排放量的一小部分。