Organic agriculture and the global food supply
University of Michigan · Michigan State University
Abstract
Abstract The principal objections to the proposition that organic agriculture can contribute significantly to the global food supply are low yields and insufficient quantities of organically acceptable fertilizers. We evaluated the universality of both claims. For the first claim, we compared yields of organic versus conventional or low-intensive food production for a global dataset of 293 examples and estimated the average yield ratio (organic:non-organic) of different food categories for the developed and the developing world. For most food categories, the average yield ratio was slightly <1.0 for studies in the developed world and >1.0 for studies in the developing world. With the average yield…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 39.11
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 127
Authors
8Topics & keywords
- Organic farming
- Agriculture
- Environmental science
- Population
- Food processing
- Food security
- Intensive farming
- Crop yield
- Zero hunger