Assessing the impact of the Nitrate Directive on farming systems using a bio-economic modelling chain
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Date
2010-10-20
Date Issued
2011-02-28
ISI Journal
Impact factor: 3.004 (Year: 2010)
Citation
Hatem Belhouchette, Kamel Louhichi, Olivier Therond, Ioanna Mouratiadou, Jacques Wery, Martin van Ittersum, Guillermo Flichman. (28/2/2011). Assessing the impact of the Nitrate Directive on farming systems using a bio-economic modelling chain. Agricultural Systems, 104 (2), pp. 135-145.
Abstract
Bio-economic models can be used to assess the impact of policy and environmental measures through
economic and environmental indicators. Focusing on agricultural systems, farmers’ decisions in terms
of cropping systems and the associated crop management at field scale are essential in such studies.
The objective of this paper is to present a study using a bio-economic model to assess the impact of
the Nitrate Directive in the Midi-Pyrenees region (France) by analyzing, at the farm scale, farm income
and three environmental indicators: nitrate leaching, erosion and water consumption. Two scenarios,
the 2003 CAP reform (baseline scenario) and the Nitrate Directive (policy scenario), with a 2013 time
horizon, were developed and compared for three representative arable farm types in the Midi-Pyrenees
region. Different types of data characterizing the biophysical context in the region (soil, climate), the current
cropping systems (rotation, crop management) and farm resources (irrigated land, labor) were collected
to calibrate and run the models. Results showed that the implementation of the Nitrate Directive
may not affect farm income. However, significant modifications to cropping systems and crop allocation
to soil types were simulated. Contrary to expectations, nitrogen leaching at the farm scale did not change.
Overall water consumption increased and soil erosion decreased due mainly to a modification in cropping
patterns and management by soil type. This study provides an example of unanticipated effects of policy
and trade-offs between environmental issues.
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Author(s) ORCID(s)
van Ittersum, Martin https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8611-6781