Can
organic crops compete with industrial agriculture?
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From: UC Berkeley
A systematic overview of more than 100 studies comparing organic
and conventional farming finds that the crop yields of organic agriculture are
higher than previously thought.
The study, conducted by UC Berkeley
researchers, also found that certain practices could further shrink the
productivity gap between organic crops and conventional farming.
The study, to be published online Wednesday, Dec. 10, in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B,
tackles the lingering perception that organic farming, while offering an
environmentally sustainable alternative to chemically intensive agriculture,
cannot produce enough food to satisfy the world’s appetite.
“With global food needs predicted to greatly increase in the next
50 years, it’s critical to look more closely at organic farming, because aside
from the environmental impacts of industrial agriculture, the ability of
synthetic fertilizers to increase crop yields has been declining.”
The researchers conducted a meta-analysis of 115 studies — a
dataset three times greater than previously published work — comparing organic
and conventional agriculture. They found that organic yields are about 19.2
percent lower than conventional ones, a smaller difference than in previous
estimates.
The researchers pointed out that the available studies comparing
farming methods were often biased in favor of conventional agriculture, so this
estimate of the yield gap is likely overestimated.
They also found that taking into account methods that optimize the
productivity of organic agriculture could minimize the yield gap. They
specifically highlighted two agricultural practices, multi-cropping (growing
several crops together on the same field) and crop rotation, that would
substantially reduce the organic-to-conventional yield gap to 9 percent and 8
percent, respectively.
The yields also depended upon the type of crop grown, the
researchers found. There were no significant differences in organic and
conventional yields for leguminous crops, such as beans, peas and lentils, for
instance.
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