Abstract

AbstractAgriculture is expected to feed an increasing global population while at the same time meeting demands for renewable energy and the supply of ecosystem services such as provision of nutrient cycling and carbon sequestration. However, the current structure of the agricultural system works against meeting these expectations. The spatial separation of crop and livestock farms has created negative environmental consequences, and bioenergy production has created a trade‐off between food and energy production. In this paper, we explore the opportunities for ecological intensification at a regional scale made possible by combining food and energy production. We built three scenarios representing farming systems including biogas production using grass biomass and manure. These scenarios included the following: (a) The current system with energy production (CSE) from non‐edible agricultural biomasses (CSE). (b) Agroecological symbiosis (AES) identical to CSE except with 20% of the arable cropping area converted to clover‐grasses for use in biogas production. (c) Agroecological symbiosis with livestock (AES‐LST) where the available grass biomass (20% as in the AES) is fed to livestock and manure then used as a feedstock in biogas production. In each scenario, nutrients were circulated back to crops in the form of digestate. The supply of soil functions (primary production for food and energy, provision of nutrient cycling, and climate mitigation) and impacts on water quality through nutrient losses in these three scenarios were then compared to the current system. Integrating biogas production into food production resulted in an increased supply of nutrient recycling, reduced nutrient losses, and increased carbon inputs to the soils indicating enhanced climate mitigation. Food production was either not affected (CSE), increased (AES‐LST), or decreased (AES), and biogas was produced in substantial quantities in each scenario. Our study demonstrated potential synergies in integrating food and energy production without compromising other ecosystem services in each scenario.

Highlights

  • We explored the current system and three in silico scenarios of farming systems that follow a gradient of complexity

  • In the Agroecological symbiosis (AES), the cropping area was reduced 20%, which resulted in 13% reduction in human digestible protein (HDP) production and 16% reduction in food energy production compared to current system (CS)

  • For non-f­ood production, biogas production can be efficiently added to farming systems without food-­fuel competition

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Summary

Introduction

These challenges include feeding an increasing global population while meeting increasing demand for renewable energy to replace fossil fuels without compromising the supply of ecosystem services (Godfray, ; Harvey & Pilgrim, 2011; Sutton et al, 2013). These challenges have been recognized in the Sustainable Development Goals set by the United Nations (2015) and by the European Union, where strengthening of the environmental ambition plays a central role in the current reform of the common agricultural policy (European Commission, 2018). These include, for instance, imbalanced nutrient flows, carbon losses from the soil, and reduced biodiversity (Heikkinen et al, 2013; Maillard & Angers, 2014; Steffen et al, 2015; Sutton et al, 2013; Uusitalo et al, 2007)

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