Reshaping the European agro-food system and closing its nitrogen cycle: The potential of combining dietary change, agroecology, and circularity
Reviewartikel, 2021

After World War II, the evolution of Europe's agro-food system has been marked by intensified use of synthetic fertilizers, territorial specialization, and integration in global food and feed markets. This evolution led to increased nitrogen (N) losses to aquatic environments and the atmosphere, which, despite increasing environmental regulations, continues to harm ecosystems and human well-being. Here, we explore how these N losses can be drastically reduced in a scenario synergistically operating three levers: (1) a dietary change toward less animal products and an efficient recycling of human excreta; (2) the generalization of region-specific organic crop rotation systems involving N2-fixing legumes, making it possible to do without synthetic N fertilizers; and (3) the reconnection of livestock with cropping systems allowing optimal use of manure. This scenario demonstrates the possibility to feed the projected European population in 2050 without imports of feed and with half the current level of environmental N losses.

human diet

Haber-Bosch nitrogen

organic farming

land sharing

agro-food systems

Europe

Författare

Gilles Billen

Sorbonne Université

Eduardo Aguilera

Universidad Politecnica de Madrid

Rasmus Einarsson

Universidad Politecnica de Madrid

Chalmers, Rymd-, geo- och miljövetenskap, Fysisk resursteori

Josette Garnier

Sorbonne Université

Simone Gingrich

Universität für Bodenkultur

Bruna Grizzetti

Gemensamma forskningscentrumet (JRC), Europeiska kommissionen

Luis Lassaletta

Universidad Politecnica de Madrid

Julia Le Noë

Universität für Bodenkultur

Alberto Sanz-Cobena

Universidad Politecnica de Madrid

One Earth

25903330 (ISSN) 25903322 (eISSN)

Vol. 4 6 839-850

Ämneskategorier

Tvärvetenskapliga studier

Annan naturresursteknik

Miljöledning

DOI

10.1016/j.oneear.2021.05.008

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2024-01-03