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Mark Brady. Photo.

Mark Brady

Policy officer

Mark Brady. Photo.

A combined approach to assess the impacts of Ecological Focus Areas on regional structural development and agricultural land use

Author

  • Amanda Sahrbacher
  • Jordan Hristov
  • Mark V. Brady

Summary, in English

The 2013 reform of the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) introduced compulsory ‘greening’ measures with the goal to mitigate environmental degradation caused by intensive agriculture. This paper aims to investigate how the implementation of the Ecological Focus Areas (EFA) obligation will affect regional agricultural development, the economic performance of farms and land use (including choices of EFA measures) in two representative EU regions. The research approach combines agent-based modelling (ABM) with stakeholder interactions to evaluate how farmers are likely to adapt to the new policy framework and the implications for their behaviour of the different components of the EFA obligation. Our results show that structural impacts of EFA measures are minor in both regions. The most preferred alternatives (fallow land in Sweden and catch crops in Germany) are income preserving for farmers rather than being effective for improving the environment. However, general concerns by farmers for biodiversity and the potential benefits for developing sustainable agriculture were revealed during the stakeholder workshops. We conclude that the large flexibility in choice of measures, watering down of the EFA regulations, implementation at the farm scale and lack of spatial targeting will all but eliminate any potential environmental benefits of the greening measures and subsequently, undermine farmers’ and citizens’ confidence in the CAP and its makers.

Department/s

  • AgriFood Economics Centre, SLU
  • Centre for Environmental and Climate Science (CEC)
  • BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate

Publishing year

2017-10-27

Language

English

Pages

111-144

Publication/Series

Review of Agricultural, Food and Environmental Studies

Volume

98

Issue

3

Document type

Journal article

Topic

  • Agricultural Science, Forestry and Fisheries
  • Ecology

Status

Published

Project

  • Rural development through governance of multifunctional agricultural land-use

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 2425-6897