Publication | Open Access
Eco‐efficient Agriculture: Concepts, Challenges, and Opportunities
330
Citations
66
References
2010
Year
Eco‐efficiency ConceptEngineeringSustainable Food SystemAgricultural EconomicsEnvironmental EconomicsAgri-environmental PolicyAgricultural ProductionAbstract Eco‐efficiencySustainable AgricultureSustainable Crop ProductionPublic HealthAgricultural ProductivityAgricultural EfficiencyCrop ManagementAgroecological SystemsAgricultureEfficiency FrontierFood SustainabilityAgricultural TechnologyAgricultural DiversificationAgricultural ModelingFarming SystemsEco‐efficient AgricultureFood Systems Sustainability
Eco‑efficiency in agriculture means producing more food and fiber with fewer inputs such as land, water, nutrients, energy, labor, and capital, while balancing ecological and economic goals and confronting social, institutional, and risk‑related barriers that will challenge productivity gains in the coming decades. The paper investigates the multidimensional eco‑efficiency concept across scales from cellular metabolism to ecosystems. The authors develop a framework that maps an efficiency frontier between agricultural outputs and inputs, investment, or risk, and employ systems analysis, modeling, farmer‑focused experimentation, and resource assessment to enhance eco‑efficiency.
ABSTRACT Eco‐efficiency in the simplest of terms is about achieving more with less—more agricultural outputs, in terms of quantity and quality, for less input of land, water, nutrients, energy, labor, or capital. The concept of eco‐efficiency encompasses both the ecological and economic dimensions of sustainable agriculture. Social and institutional dimensions of sustainability, while not explicitly captured in eco‐efficiency measures, remain critical barriers and opportunities on the pathway toward more eco‐efficient agriculture. This paper explores the multidimensionality of the eco‐efficiency concept as it applies to agriculture across diverse spatial and temporal scales, from cellular metabolisms through to crops, farms, regions, and ecosystems. These dimensions of eco‐efficiency are integrated through the presentation and exploration of a framework that explores an efficiency frontier between agricultural outputs and inputs, investment, or risk. The challenge for agriculture in the coming decades will be to increase productivity of agricultural lands in line with the increasing demands for food and fiber. Achieving such eco‐efficiency, while addressing risk and variability, will be a major challenge for future agriculture. Often, risk will be a critical issue influencing adoption; it needs explicit attention in the diagnosis and intervention steps toward enhancing eco‐efficiency. To ensure food security, systems analysis and modeling approaches, combined with farmer‐focused experimentation and resource assessment, will provide the necessary robust approaches to raise the eco‐efficiency of agricultural systems.
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