Content area

Abstract

Achieving food-system sustainability is a multidimensional challenge. In China, a doubling of crop production since 1990 has compromised other dimensions of sustainability1,2. Although the country is promoting various interventions to enhance production efficiency and reduce environmental impacts3, there is little understanding of whether crop switching can achieve more sustainable cropping systems and whether coordinated action is needed to avoid tradeoffs. Here we combine highresolution data on crop-specific yields, harvested areas, environmental footprints and farmer incomes to first quantify the current state of crop-production sustainability. Under varying levels of inter-ministerial and central coordination, we perform spatial optimizations that redistribute crops to meet a suite of agricultural sustainable development targets. With a siloed approach-in which each government ministry seeks to improve a single sustainability outcome in isolation-crop switching could realize large individual benefits but produce tradeoffs for other dimensions and between regions. In cases of central coordination-in which tradeoffs are preventedwe find marked co-benefits for environmental-impact reductions (blue water (-4.5% to -18.5%), green water (-4.4% to -9.5%), greenhouse gases (GHGs) (-1.7% to -7.7%), fertilizers (-5.2% to -10.9%), pesticides (-4.3% to -10.8%)) and increased farmer incomes (+2.9% to +7.5%). These outcomes of centrally coordinated crop switching can contribute substantially (23-40% across dimensions) towards China's 2030 agricultural sustainable development targets and potentially produce global resource savings. This integrated approach can inform feasible targeted agricultural interventions that achieve sustainability co-benefits across several dimensions.

Details

Title
Crop switching can enhance environmental sustainability and farmer incomes in China
Author
Xie, Wei 1 ; Zhu, Anfeng 1 ; Ali, Tariq 2 ; Zhang, Zhengtao 3 ; Chen, Xiaoguang 4 ; Wu, Feng; Huang, Jikun; Davis, Kyle Frankel

 Peking University, Beijing, China 
 School of Economics and Management, Jiangxi Agricultural University, Nanchang, China 
 School of National Safety and Emergency Management, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China 
 Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, Chengdu, China 
Pages
300-3,305A-305L
Section
Article
Publication year
2023
Publication date
Apr 13, 2023
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
00280836
e-ISSN
14764687
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2802096738
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Apr 13, 2023