Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 4 — Narrative / commentaryPeer-reviewed

Sustainability in global agriculture driven by organic farming

Frank Eyhorn, Adrian Müller, John P. Reganold, Emile Frison, H. R. Herren, Louise Luttikholt, Alexander Mueller, Jürn Sanders, Nadia El-Hage Scialabba, Verena Seufert, Pete Smith

Nature Sustainability · 2019

Read source ↗ All evidence

Summary

This Nature Sustainability paper, authored by a prominent international consortium of organic and sustainable agriculture researchers, examines the potential for organic farming to drive sustainability in global agriculture. The authors assess how organic production systems contribute across environmental, economic and social dimensions, drawing on evidence from diverse agricultural contexts. The work represents a synthesis of current understanding on organic farming's role within broader sustainability transitions.

UK applicability

The findings are likely applicable to UK policy and practice, particularly regarding organic certification standards, CAP reform and agroecological transitions. However, UK-specific conditions (climate, soil types, market structure) may moderate the applicability of globally derived conclusions.

Key measures

As suggested by the title, likely measures of sustainability outcomes (environmental, economic, social) attributable to organic farming systems globally

Outcomes reported

The study examined how organic farming contributes to sustainability across multiple dimensions of global agricultural systems. It likely synthesised evidence on environmental, social and economic outcomes associated with organic farming practices.

Theme
Farming systems, soils & land use
Subject
Regenerative & agroecological farming
Study type
Narrative Review
Study design
Narrative review
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
Status
Published
Geography
Global
System type
Organic systems
DOI
10.1038/s41893-019-0266-6
Catalogue ID
BFmovi20nx-6t0fbd

Topic tags

Pulse AI · ask about this record

Dig deeper with Pulse AI.

Pulse AI has read the whole catalogue. Ask about this record, its theme, or how the findings apply to UK farming and policy — every answer cites the underlying studies.