Toward sustainability of territorial agro-food systems in Europe: indicators for assessing alternative scenarios

Describing territorial agro-food systems through nitrogen flows between agriculture, livestock farming, human consumption, and external trade represents a useful basis for assessing the environmental sustainability of these systems. The concepts of circularity and self-sufficiency are often put forw...

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Main Authors: Josette Garnier, Gilles Billen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IOP Publishing 2025-01-01
Series:Environmental Research Letters
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/adf97e
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author Josette Garnier
Gilles Billen
author_facet Josette Garnier
Gilles Billen
author_sort Josette Garnier
collection DOAJ
description Describing territorial agro-food systems through nitrogen flows between agriculture, livestock farming, human consumption, and external trade represents a useful basis for assessing the environmental sustainability of these systems. The concepts of circularity and self-sufficiency are often put forward in assessments to complement indicators related to environmental impacts, such as nitrogen use efficiency, environmental N surplus, N losses. Here, we use these indicators to assess the environmental performance and sustainability of the agro-food systems of 127 regions in Europe in their current state as well as under two alternative scenarios of varying degrees of structural changes designed to reach sustainability. Both scenarios consider the projected European population at 2050, a dietary change toward less animal protein (30% and 20%, instead of 57% for the reference situation, Ref 2015–2019) and are based on the widespread use of organic crop rotations and the banning of synthetic fertilizers and feed imports. An Agro-Ecology scenario (AE) exploits crop and livestock production at optimal production capacity in the current agricultural areas of each region, thus maintaining the possibility of external trade, while a Radical Simplicity of lifestyle scenario (RS), limits production to regional requirements, with excess agricultural land set aside for reforestation and rewilding. AE and RS are able to feed Europe and greatly reduce environmental losses (more than 50% for both scenarios), but some not self-sufficient regions still necessitate interregional exchanges. Full circularity is theoretically not possible; it increases from 30% (Ref) to 43% (AE). At the European scale, N-food self-sufficiency remains over 1 (2.6 for Ref, 1.6–1.2 for AE and RS), while import dependency of European regions on commercial N-import for food delivery, currently over 2.7 as a mean, drops below 0.1 in both scenarios. The results illustrate the complex relationships between self-sufficiency, circularity, and the environmental impact of territorial agro-food systems.
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spelling doaj-art-1e3e95cbebfd48358dced56f632d531e2025-08-22T15:43:12ZengIOP PublishingEnvironmental Research Letters1748-93262025-01-0120909405910.1088/1748-9326/adf97eToward sustainability of territorial agro-food systems in Europe: indicators for assessing alternative scenariosJosette Garnier0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9416-9242Gilles Billen1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4413-4169CNRS, Sorbonne-Université, EPHE, Metis UMR , 4 place Jussieu, Paris 7619, FranceCNRS, Sorbonne-Université, EPHE, Metis UMR , 4 place Jussieu, Paris 7619, FranceDescribing territorial agro-food systems through nitrogen flows between agriculture, livestock farming, human consumption, and external trade represents a useful basis for assessing the environmental sustainability of these systems. The concepts of circularity and self-sufficiency are often put forward in assessments to complement indicators related to environmental impacts, such as nitrogen use efficiency, environmental N surplus, N losses. Here, we use these indicators to assess the environmental performance and sustainability of the agro-food systems of 127 regions in Europe in their current state as well as under two alternative scenarios of varying degrees of structural changes designed to reach sustainability. Both scenarios consider the projected European population at 2050, a dietary change toward less animal protein (30% and 20%, instead of 57% for the reference situation, Ref 2015–2019) and are based on the widespread use of organic crop rotations and the banning of synthetic fertilizers and feed imports. An Agro-Ecology scenario (AE) exploits crop and livestock production at optimal production capacity in the current agricultural areas of each region, thus maintaining the possibility of external trade, while a Radical Simplicity of lifestyle scenario (RS), limits production to regional requirements, with excess agricultural land set aside for reforestation and rewilding. AE and RS are able to feed Europe and greatly reduce environmental losses (more than 50% for both scenarios), but some not self-sufficient regions still necessitate interregional exchanges. Full circularity is theoretically not possible; it increases from 30% (Ref) to 43% (AE). At the European scale, N-food self-sufficiency remains over 1 (2.6 for Ref, 1.6–1.2 for AE and RS), while import dependency of European regions on commercial N-import for food delivery, currently over 2.7 as a mean, drops below 0.1 in both scenarios. The results illustrate the complex relationships between self-sufficiency, circularity, and the environmental impact of territorial agro-food systems.https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/adf97enitrogen in agro-food systemsterritorial European scaleagro-ecological scenarioradical simplicity of lifestyleindicator designenvironmental impacts
spellingShingle Josette Garnier
Gilles Billen
Toward sustainability of territorial agro-food systems in Europe: indicators for assessing alternative scenarios
Environmental Research Letters
nitrogen in agro-food systems
territorial European scale
agro-ecological scenario
radical simplicity of lifestyle
indicator design
environmental impacts
title Toward sustainability of territorial agro-food systems in Europe: indicators for assessing alternative scenarios
title_full Toward sustainability of territorial agro-food systems in Europe: indicators for assessing alternative scenarios
title_fullStr Toward sustainability of territorial agro-food systems in Europe: indicators for assessing alternative scenarios
title_full_unstemmed Toward sustainability of territorial agro-food systems in Europe: indicators for assessing alternative scenarios
title_short Toward sustainability of territorial agro-food systems in Europe: indicators for assessing alternative scenarios
title_sort toward sustainability of territorial agro food systems in europe indicators for assessing alternative scenarios
topic nitrogen in agro-food systems
territorial European scale
agro-ecological scenario
radical simplicity of lifestyle
indicator design
environmental impacts
url https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/adf97e
work_keys_str_mv AT josettegarnier towardsustainabilityofterritorialagrofoodsystemsineuropeindicatorsforassessingalternativescenarios
AT gillesbillen towardsustainabilityofterritorialagrofoodsystemsineuropeindicatorsforassessingalternativescenarios