4.7 Article

Economic and Environmental Assessment of Olive Agroforestry Practices in Northern Greece

Journal

AGRICULTURE-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agriculture12060851

Keywords

agroforestry systems; olive growing systems; Life Cycle Assessment; Life Cycle Costing; Activity-Based Costing

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The preservation and promotion of agroforestry systems are important for ecosystem services, biodiversity benefits, and climate change mitigation. However, traditional agroforestry systems in the EU face adaptation problems. This study assesses the managerial framework of olive agroforestry practices in Northern Greece and analyzes the economic and environmental implications of four production plans. The results show significant deviations among the production plans and suggest the need for a decision support system for preserving current agroforestry systems.
Preservation and promotion of agroforestry systems entails the ideology for more ecosystem services, additional biodiversity benefits and climate change mitigation. Furthermore, farmland and forest landscapes and the consequent benefits to the environment from their combination, enhance the importance of agroforestry systems towards sustainable environmental policies. Nevertheless, traditional agroforestry systems face significant adaptation problems, especially in the EU, due to continuous economic reforms and strict agri-environmental measures. In this context our main goal is to assess the current managerial framework of two agroforestry systems and more specifically the olive agroforestry practices in Northern Greece. The economic and environmental implications of four different production plans are highlighted following the Life Cycle Costing and the Life Cycle Assessment protocols. The production plans include the simultaneous cultivation of annual crops, such as vetch and barley, along with olive groves. Potential environmental impacts are depicted in CO2 equivalents, while the economic allocation of costs is divided in targeted categories (e.g., raw materials, labor, land rent, etc.). The results indicate significant deviations among the four production plans, with the combination of olive trees and barley being heavily dependent on fertilization. Furthermore, the open-spaced olive trees intercropped with a mixture of barley and commonly depicted the lowest CO2 eq. emissions, though the economic cost was significantly higher than the other agroforestry system intercropped with barley only. The authors suggest that the formulation of a decision support system for agroforestry systems should be taken into account in order to preserve current agroforestry systems.

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