4.7 Article

Environmental effects and their causes of agricultural production: Evidence from the farming regions of China

Journal

ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
Volume 144, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2022.109549

Keywords

Agricultural sustainability; Agrochemicals use; Water management; Modern agriculture

Funding

  1. China National Science Foundation
  2. Natural Science Foun-dation of Chongqing
  3. China Post-doctoral Science Foundation
  4. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
  5. Social Science Planning Research Doctoral Program of Chongqing Social Science Planning Office
  6. [41731286]
  7. [42101203]
  8. [42201204]
  9. [2018GXNSFDA281032]
  10. [2021M693709]
  11. [2022CDSKXYGG006]
  12. [2020BS43]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This paper investigates the environmental effects and drivers of agricultural production, focusing on fertilizer application and water quality. The findings show that household income level, proximity to provincial capital city, natural conditions like precipitation and elevation, and agricultural mechanization level are significant factors influencing fertilizer use and water quality. The study highlights the importance of socio-economic determinants and regional natural conditions in achieving sustainable agricultural growth.
Farming in sustainable ways is rapidly gaining importance, which necessitates a quantitative understanding of the major determinants of agricultural environmental consequences. The main objective of this paper is to investigate the environmental effects and their drivers of agricultural production through the lens of fertilizer application and water quality. An integration of the econometric modeling and machine learning methodologies (multiple regression model and boosted regression trees method) was employed to dissect the relative impor-tance and the non-linearity of each variable. The results showed that (1) Household income level is a primary contributing factor to both fertilizers use and water quality, demonstrating an increasing marginal effect. (2) Proximity factor-distance from provincial capital city positively correlated with these two terms. (3) Water quality is more sensitive to natural conditions, such as precipitation and elevation, which also considerably affect fertilizer use. (4) Agricultural mechanization level is positively related to fertilizer use despite their non-linear effects. In summary, capital, technology, and labor input are the major socio-economic determinants of the environmental consequences, which were also largely associated with regional natural conditions. These findings provide quantitative insights that can be used to improve the agro-environment and achieve sustainable agri-cultural growth.

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