A thermodynamic methodology to assess how different cultivation methods affect sustainability of agricultural systems
Material type: ArticleLanguage: English Publication details: United Kingdom : Taylor & Francis, 2002.ISSN:- 1350-4509
- 1745-2627 (Online)
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Article | CIMMYT Knowledge Center: John Woolston Library | Reprints Collection | Available |
Peer review
To evaluate environmental sustainability of complex systems, such as agricultural cultivation, it is necessary to adopt a systemic approach that considers all mass and energy flows that drive processes and that interlace, amplify, and influence each other. Emergy analysis, a thermodynamic-ecological methodology developed by Odum (1988), produces powerful indicators to evaluate process efficiency and to assess long-term sustainability. We performed a comparison among three cherry crops with different cultivation methods (traditional, biological and integrated) employing different inputs (natural and non-natural), in order to understand how agricultural systems should be developed in order to be economically successful with respect to the environment. Traditional methods using high quantities of non-natural inputs demonstrated unsustainability, while the integrated method of natural and purchased inputs turned out to be the best. The emergy approach demonstrated a powerful methodology to assess sustainability, and the indications obtained for cherry crops could be extrapolated to other types of cultivation.
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