The Sustainable Intensification of Agriculture

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De Vivo, R., A. Marchis, E.J. Gonzalez-Sanchez, and E. Capri (2016). The Sustainable Intensification of Agriculture. Solutions 7(5): 24-31. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/the-sustainable-intensification-of-agriculture/

Perspectives The Sustainable Intensification of Agriculture by Romano De Vivo, Alexandru Marchis, Emilio J. Gonzalez-Sanchez, and Ettore Capri

N. Pavese, Syngenta 2016

Biodiversity enhancement.

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limate change, water scarcity, and the limited availability of arable land while demand is on the continuous rise, make it clear that we need alternatives to conventional farming. With the Earth’s population predicted to rise to nine billion by 2050, we must increase the yields of global agriculture without environmental degradation or cultivating more land. Producing 70 percent more food for an additional 2.3 billion people by 2050, while at the same time combating poverty and hunger, using scarce natural resources more efficiently, and adapting to climate change are the main challenges world agriculture will face in the coming decades.

Given these challenges, current approaches are or may become unsustainable. We must find new methods that address all elements of the agricultural system, encompassing better soil and land management, as well as the enhancement of soil structure and biodiversity. The sustainable intensification of crop production approach focuses on the need to feed a growing population while coping with an increasingly degraded environment and uncertainties resulting from climate change. This concept provides opportunities for optimizing crop production per unit area, taking into consideration the range of sustainability aspects including potential and/

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or real social, political, economic and environmental impacts. Securing the food supply requires a coordinated effort with a clear vision of both the challenges and the potential of proposed solutions. New efforts must be resource efficient, or in other words, to produce more with less, primarily with regard to soil and water, but also with regards to other inputs such as fertilizers, plant protection products, energy, and labor. The realization of this goal—that clearly depends upon the ability to activate the knowledge transfer needed to support and strengthen the rural communities and improved collaboration in the value chain—would not only


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