Abstract

This study describes the influence of orchard cultural practices during the productive process of cherries on the environmental impact in terms of energy, air, soil and water through a “farm to market” Life Cycle Assessment (LCA). The results were used to identify the orchard cultural practices that contribute significantly to the environmental impact and to find solutions to reduce those impacts, serving as best practices guide to improving the environmental performance and as benchmarks for other national and international cherry and fruit growers. Primary data for production, harvest and post-harvest periods were gathered experimentally. The openLCA 1.10.2 software and the ecoinvent 3.5 database were used for modelling. Test case scenarios are modelled to identify the influence of cultural practices in low and high cherry production campaigns depending on climatic conditions and consequently diseases and plagues. Moreover, results are compared with other studies, not only covering cherries but also other fruits. The energy consumption per hectare in the production phase is similar in test scenarios. The energy consumption of orchard cultural practices related to tractor use, fertilizers and fungicides application are the main hotspots in terms of global warming, freshwater ecotoxicity and eutrophication, and terrestrial acidification. The use of electric vehicles, change the warehouse location or redefine transportation routes can reduce this impact, along with the optimization of the cherry’s quantity transported in each trip. In addition, the use of plant protection products, fertilizers and herbicides with less environmental impact will contribute to this objective. For that, the use of agriculture and precision systems to predict the need for fertilizers (nutrients), herbicides and fungicides, the use of decision support systems to define the dates of cultural practices, as well as innovative and emerging food and by-products processing methods are suggested. Thus, this study identifies and quantifies the environmental impacts associated with the production system of cherries and their main hotspots. It provides a best-practices guide for sustainable solutions in orchard management that contributes to the competitiveness and sustainability of fruit companies.

Highlights

  • IntroductionOne of the most discussed topics nowadays is the environment and the impact of agricultural activities

  • The option for using two impact assessment methods fell on the fact that the CML 2011 method is more adequate to evaluate the global warming indicator while the ReCiPe 2008 Midpoint (E) method is more complete and suitable for the other indicators

  • This study presents the value for the global warming indicator of 0.30096 kg CO2 eq /kg of marketable cherry and did not account for

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Summary

Introduction

One of the most discussed topics nowadays is the environment and the impact of agricultural activities. In recent years, efforts have been made in several areas to develop sustainable alternatives that can replace or improve the current ones [1]. The evolution from traditional practices to intensive agriculture in order to increase plantation productivity has led to environmental impacts, such as resource depletion, soil erosion and global warming, among others [2]. The agri-food sector has frequently been considered one of the major sectors with the highest environmental impact [3]

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