Misunderstanding conservation agriculture: Challenges in promoting, monitoring and evaluating sustainable farming

被引:29
|
作者
Findlater, K. M. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Kandlikar, M. [1 ,2 ]
Satterfield, T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ British Columbia, Inst Resources Environm & Sustainabil, Vancouver, BC, Canada
[2] Univ British Columbia, Sch Publ Policy & Global Affairs, Vancouver, BC, Canada
[3] Univ Cape Town, African Climate & Dev Initiat, Cape Town, South Africa
基金
加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会;
关键词
Conservation agriculture; Sustainable agriculture; Climate change adaptation; Climate resilience; South Africa; CLIMATE-CHANGE; ADOPTION; ADAPTATION; BEHAVIOR;
D O I
10.1016/j.envsci.2019.05.027
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Commercial agriculture is central to problems of sustainability in food, water, energy and climate change. Appropriate solutions will depend on the effective promotion, monitoring and evaluation of changes in farming practice. Conservation agriculture (CA) is an important example of sustainable intensification and climate-smart agriculture, increasing the productivity and reliability of grain production while reducing agricultural inputs and future climate risks when adopted comprehensively. But to understand its implementation and benefits, researchers often rely on simplified measures of CA adoption (e.g., single proxies, binary measures, broad self assessments, expert estimates). Here we use a national survey of South Africa's commercial grain farmers (n = 441), contextualized by previous interviews, to investigate common measures of adoption and their implications for CA's promotion, monitoring and evaluation. These farmers are unusually informative, because they are unsubsidized but have the capacity, incentive and willingness to adapt to climate change. We find that they are adopting CA autonomously, but that their implementation is highly variable and their interpretation of farming practice differs from that of local experts. Single proxies, binary adoption variables and broad farmer self-assessments suggest that between 40 and 80% of farmers have adopted CA. However, when evaluated across the three CA principles using UN-defined adoption thresholds, the comprehensive adoption rate is only 14%. Farmers' definition of "conservation" differs substantially from that of the local experts most likely to be asked to contribute adoption estimates to global monitoring efforts, creating the potential for miscommunication. There is therefore substantial cause for concern in how CA is currently promoted, monitored and evaluated. Inaccurate adoption estimates jeopardize CA's potential as a climate change adaptation strategy, creating illusory progress that may disincentivize further substantive efforts towards agricultural sustainability and climate resilience.
引用
收藏
页码:47 / 54
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Farming systems for sustainable agriculture and environmental quality
    Kanwar, RS
    Karlen, DL
    Cambardella, C
    Moorman, TB
    APPLICATIONS OF SYSTEMS APPROACHES AT THE FIELD LEVEL: PROCEEDINGS OF THE SECOND INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON SYSTEMS APPROACHES FOR AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT, VOL 2, 1997, 6 : 413 - 418
  • [22] Organic Agriculture as a Future Strategy for Sustainable Farming
    Popa, Ramona Ovidia
    Rodino, Steliana
    Butu, Alina
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON BUSINESS EXCELLENCE, 2024, 18 (01): : 1506 - 1517
  • [23] Towards Smart Farming and Sustainable Agriculture with Drones
    Tripicchio, Paolo
    Satler, Massimo
    Dabisias, Giacomo
    Ruffaldi, Emanuele
    Avizzano, Carlo A.
    2015 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INTELLIGENT ENVIRONMENTS IE 2015, 2015, : 140 - 143
  • [24] Ancient agriculture: Roots and application of sustainable farming
    Herrera, Robinson A.
    AGRICULTURAL HISTORY, 2008, 82 (03) : 413 - 415
  • [25] ORGANIC FARMING AS A PART OF THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OF AGRICULTURE
    Koloszko-Chomentowska, Zofia
    Zukovskis, Jan
    8TH INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE RURAL DEVELOPMENT 2017: BIOECONOMY CHALLENGES, 2017, : 1103 - 1107
  • [26] The reorganization of Lithuanian agriculture towards sustainable farming
    Gutkauskas, A
    AMBIO, 1997, 26 (07) : 442 - 444
  • [27] Smart farming is key to developing sustainable agriculture
    Walter, Achim
    Finger, Robert
    Huber, Robert
    Buchmann, Nina
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2017, 114 (24) : 6148 - 6150
  • [28] FARMING IN 2031 - A SCENARIO OF SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE IN CANADA
    VANBERS, C
    ROBINSON, JB
    JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE, 1993, 4 (01): : 41 - 65
  • [29] Computer Vision for Smart Farming and Sustainable Agriculture
    Tombe, Ronald
    2020 IST-AFRICA CONFERENCE (IST-AFRICA), 2020,
  • [30] SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE - ENGINEERING CHALLENGES
    WRUBLESKI, EM
    CANADIAN AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING, 1990, 32 (01): : U1 - U1