| Literature DB >> 31055793 |
Nathan Clay1, Tara Garnett2, Jamie Lorimer3.
Abstract
Dairy production systems have rapidly intensified over the past several decades. Dairy farms in many world regions are larger and concentrated in fewer hands. Higher productivity can increase overall economic gains but also incurs site-specific social and environmental costs. In this paper, we review the drivers and impacts of dairy intensification. We identify in the literature four prominent concerns about dairy intensification: the environment, animal welfare, socioeconomic well-being, and human health. We then critically assess three frameworks-sustainable intensification, multifunctionality, and agroecology-which promise win-win solutions to these concerns. We call for research and policy approaches that can better account for synergies and trade-offs among the multiple dimensions of dairy impacts. Specifically, we suggest the need to (1) consider dairy system transitions within broader processes of social-environmental change and (2) investigate how certain framings and metrics may lead to uneven social-environmental outcomes. Such work can help visualize transformations towards more equitable, ethical, and sustainable food systems.Entities:
Keywords: Agricultural intensification; Agroecology; Food system; Multifunctional agriculture; Organic; Sustainable intensification
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31055793 PMCID: PMC6888798 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-019-01177-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Fig. 1The impacts of dairy intensification along four dimensions
Comparing the relative merits of the three research/policy framings for alternative dairy systems
| Sustainable intensification | Multifunctionality | Agroecology | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Need to increase food production while reducing resource use; characterized by supply-side tweaks to enable lower resource use that conserves biodiversity and reduces GHG emissions | Rural landscapes more than food production: also have cultural and environmental value; characterized by changes to production-consumption networks that account for these values | Self-sufficient production-consumption systems (minimizing external inputs) that optimize local knowledge of biophysical elements to enhance food sovereignty and justice | |
| Very large farms; investment in new technologies to minimize resource use (land, water, nutrients) and GHG emissions and to better manage nutrients to prevent water pollution; common mechanisms include genetic and other modification of animals and feed as well as grazing management | Organic or ‘alternative food networks’ such as community supported agriculture, which shorten supply chains and add value, often through substituting organic inputs; schemes of payments for environmental services such as planting trees; productivity often lower than conventional | Diversified farming that includes crops and livestock; ecologically grounded techniques such as conservation tillage, green manure, biological pest control, agroforestry, rainwater harvesting; farmer empowerment through learning and adaptive decision making | |
| Economic and some environmental issues (e.g. GHG emissions); little about health and social issues, or animal welfare | Social and economic; some environmental aspects (e.g. ecosystem services); little about animal welfare or health | Environmental, political, and social; less attention to health and animal welfare | |
| High feasibility due to technological nature of changes and continued productivist mindset | Moderate feasibility due to simple adjustments to production systems; but inadequately defined | Low feasibility due to challenges of scaling up and mainstreaming in policies that are structured around industrial agriculture | |
| Low level of food system transformation, mostly relevant for large farms; fixes mainly technical | Moderate transformation needed; Mostly relevant for small and medium farms | High level of transformation; mostly relevant for small, mixed crop-livestock systems | |
| Low change to amount of consumption; designed to meet business as usual predicted increased food demands of growing consumption | Moderate change: changing type of consumption (e.g. more organic, local, artisanal dairy), but little about amount of dairy consumed | Moderate change: need to reduce consumption for this model to work |