TY - JOUR
T1 - Science in the Supply Chain
T2 - Collaboration Opportunities for Advancing Sustainable Agriculture in the United States
AU - Thomson, Allison M.
AU - Ramsey, Stewart
AU - Barnes, Ed
AU - Basso, Bruno
AU - Eve, Marlen
AU - Gennet, Sasha
AU - Grassini, Patricio
AU - Kliethermes, Brandon
AU - Matlock, Marty
AU - McClellen, Eileen
AU - Spevak, Ed
AU - Snyder, Clifford S.
AU - Tomer, Mark D.
AU - van Kessel, Chris
AU - West, Tristram
AU - Wick, Grant
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank the Field to Market Board of Directors, member organizations and staff for their support in development of this paper, and for the decade of investment and effort that has already been made in defining sustainability outcomes and developing indicators for assessing progress for US commodity crops. We also thank the reviewers and editor at Agricultural and Environmental Letters, whose comments substantially improved this manuscript. This work was supported by Field to Market and the Walton Family Foundation.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2017 by the American Society of Agronomy, Crop Science Society of America, and Soil Science Society of America, Inc.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Core Ideas: Sustainability indicators for US agriculture demonstrate improvement since 1980. Emerging multi-stakeholder initiatives are seeking to drive further improvement. Collaboration with the scientific community is key to achieving improvements. Consumers and corporations are increasingly interested in understanding the sustainability of agricultural supply chains and reducing the environmental impacts of food, fiber, feed, and fuel production. This emerging need to quantify environmental impacts from agricultural production creates an opportunity for collaboration with the scientific community. Without such collaboration, sustainability efforts risk failure by adopting unrealistic goals or misguided approaches. This commentary explores the role of science in Field to Market, a nonprofit organization developing a sustainability program for US commodity crops, and highlights opportunities to address emerging science challenges. We evaluate changes over the past 35 years in key environmental impacts of crop production used to inform land managers as well as companies that are committed to improvements. Achieving improvements will only be possible if three key gaps are addressed regarding available simulation models and data, scale of implementation and uncertainty, and effectiveness of conservation practices. Filling these gaps presents an opportunity for dialogue between scientists, farmers, and private-sector stakeholders to advance scientific knowledge and promote the common objective of sustainable agriculture.
AB - Core Ideas: Sustainability indicators for US agriculture demonstrate improvement since 1980. Emerging multi-stakeholder initiatives are seeking to drive further improvement. Collaboration with the scientific community is key to achieving improvements. Consumers and corporations are increasingly interested in understanding the sustainability of agricultural supply chains and reducing the environmental impacts of food, fiber, feed, and fuel production. This emerging need to quantify environmental impacts from agricultural production creates an opportunity for collaboration with the scientific community. Without such collaboration, sustainability efforts risk failure by adopting unrealistic goals or misguided approaches. This commentary explores the role of science in Field to Market, a nonprofit organization developing a sustainability program for US commodity crops, and highlights opportunities to address emerging science challenges. We evaluate changes over the past 35 years in key environmental impacts of crop production used to inform land managers as well as companies that are committed to improvements. Achieving improvements will only be possible if three key gaps are addressed regarding available simulation models and data, scale of implementation and uncertainty, and effectiveness of conservation practices. Filling these gaps presents an opportunity for dialogue between scientists, farmers, and private-sector stakeholders to advance scientific knowledge and promote the common objective of sustainable agriculture.
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U2 - 10.2134/ael2017.05.0015
DO - 10.2134/ael2017.05.0015
M3 - Comment/debate
AN - SCOPUS:85026875431
SN - 2471-9625
VL - 2
SP - 1
EP - 6
JO - Agricultural and Environmental Letters
JF - Agricultural and Environmental Letters
IS - 1
ER -