Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Organic Agriculture, Food Security, and the Environment

Eva‐Marie Meemken, Matin Qaim

Annual Review of Resource Economics · 2018

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Summary

Organic agriculture is often perceived as more sustainable than conventional farming. We review the literature on this topic from a global perspective. In terms of environmental and climate change effects, organic farming is less polluting than conventional farming when measured per unit of land but not when measured per unit of output. Organic farming, which currently accounts for only 1% of global agricultural land, is lower yielding on average. Due to higher knowledge requirements, observed yield gaps might further increase if a larger number of farmers would switch to organic practices. Widespread upscaling of organic agriculture would cause additional loss of natural habitats and also entail output price increases, making food less affordable for poor consumers in developing countries

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1146/annurev-resource-100517-023252
Catalogue ID
SNmojxd7sn-0uicch
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