1. Productivity developments in European agriculture: relations to and opportunities for biomass production
- Author
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de Wit, M.P., Londo, H.M., Faaij, A.P.C., Options for a sustainable energy supply, Sub Science, Technology & Society begr., and Dep Scheikunde
- Subjects
Eastern european ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Annual growth rate ,Agriculture ,business.industry ,Yield (finance) ,Economics ,Agricultural policy ,Context (language use) ,Current yield ,business ,Productivity ,Agricultural economics - Abstract
This paper discusses if, how fast and to what maximum yield improvements can be realized in Europe in the coming decades and what the opportunities and relations are to biomass production. The starting point for the analysis is the historic context of developments in European agriculture over the past five decades. Historic developments in European crop and animal protein productivity between 1961 and 2007 show an average mean annual growth rate of 1.6%. In relative terms developments are slower on average in the Netherlands and France at 1.0% y −1 than in Poland and Ukraine (USSR) at 2.2% y −1 . In absolute figures, however, growth has been considerable in WEC and modest in the CEEC. Yield trends further show that significant yield changes can be realized over a short period of time. Positive growth rates of 3–5% y −1 were reached in several countries and for several crops in several decades. In Eastern European countries during their transition in the 1990s, negative growth rates as low as −7% y −1 occurred. Outcomes suggest that productivity levels can be actively steered rather than being just the result of autonomous developments. Current yield gaps differ greatly between Western Europe (France −1 . High yielding lignocellulosic crops could double this potential. It is concluded that the potential to free-up agricultural lands for the production of bioenergy crops in Europe is considerable. The degree to and the pace at which yields develop will determine how much of the potential is opened up. Agricultural policy and technological development are key to open up the potential.
- Published
- 2011