Modelling and valuing the environmental impacts of arable, forestry and agroforestry systems: a case study

Date

2017-10-03

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

0167-4366

Format

Free to read from

Citation

García de Jalón, S., Graves, A., Palma, J.H.N. et al. Agroforest Systems, August 2018, Volume 92, Issue 4, Pages 1059-1073.

Abstract

The use of land for intensive arable production in Europe is associated with a range of externalities that typically impose costs on third parties. The introduction of trees in arable systems can potentially be used to reduce these costs. This paper assesses the profitability and environmental externalities of a silvoarable agroforestry system, and compares this with the profitability and environmental externalities from an arable system and a forestry system. A silvoarable experimental plot of poplar trees planted in 1992 in Bedfordshire, Eastern England, was used as a case study. The Yield-SAFE model was used to simulate the growth and yields of the silvoarable, arable, and forestry land uses along with the associated environmental externalities, including carbon sequestration, greenhouse gas emissions, nitrogen and phosphorus surplus, and soil erosion losses by water. The Farm-SAFE model was then used to quantify the monetary value of these effects. The study assesses both the financial profitability from a farmer perspective and the economic benefit from a societal perspective. The arable option was the most financially profitable system followed by the silvoarable system and forestry. However, when the environmental externalities were included, silvoarable agroforestry provided the greatest benefit. This suggests that the appropriate integration of trees in arable land can provide greater well-being benefits to society overall, than arable farming without trees, or forestry systems on their own.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Yield-SAFE, Farm-SAFE, Silvoarable, Externality, Profitability, Valuation

DOI

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International

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