Agroecology as a means to improve energy metabolism and economic management in smallholder cocoa farmers in the Ecuadorian Amazon

Cocoa is one of the most important crops in Ecuador, especially in the Ecuadorian Amazon, where >60,000 ha are dedicated to cocoa; 48,600 ha in production in 2021. Most of the cocoa area (82 %) is managed by smallholders with <10 ha under cultivation. Despite the socioeconomic and environmental importance of these systems, there are no previous studies that provide an integrated view of the energy metabolism and economic viability of different smallholder management styles. Consequently, the objective of this work is twofold: a) to estimate the aggregate energy and economic metabolism of small cocoa producers (< 10 ha) in the Ecuadorian Amazon and b) to investigate the existing differences in the technical-economic management styles of the crop. To this end, primary data were collected from a statistically representative sample of cocoa-growing areas distributed among 279 producers in 86 communities in the region, using the life cycle assessment (LCA) methodology and a cost-benefit analysis associated with management. Our data show that most smallholder farmers produce cocoa in low-input diversified agroforest system with a high share of unpaid family labor. At the Amazon level, smallholder farmers (< 10 ha) produced 16.9 million tons of food for the market with a non-renewable cumulative energy demand (NR CED) of 53.8 TJ (1343 MJ/ha), a carbon footprint (CF) of 8.16 Mt. CO2-eq. (203.9 kg CO2-eq/ha), and a net margin of 19.07 million $ (476.8 $/ha). On average, cocoa yields were estimated at 288 kg/ha, resulting in a NR CED and carbon footprint (CF) per kg of cocoa of 4.18 MJ and 0.98 kg CO2-eq. Despite its apparent homogeneity, three distinct styles of crop management were identified by a cluster analysis. The results suggest that farms with good organic/agroecological management can have a similar income generating capacity to the more intensive conventional farms evaluated, but with better environmental outcomes. Consequently, the paper finally discusses the need to promote public actions and policies that allow for the scaling up and improvement of successful agroecological management in the Ecuadorian Amazon.

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Main Authors: Caicedo Vargas, Carlos, Gallar, David, Pérez Neira, David, Abad González, Julio
Format: Artículo biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: 2023-08-07
Subjects:STYLES OF MANAGEMENTS, LCA, ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY, AGROFORESTRY, ORGANIC FARMING, SUSTAINABILITY,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.spc.2023.08.005
http://repositorio.iniap.gob.ec/handle/41000/6057
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spelling dig-iniap-41000-60572023-11-15T03:02:06Z Agroecology as a means to improve energy metabolism and economic management in smallholder cocoa farmers in the Ecuadorian Amazon Caicedo Vargas, Carlos Gallar, David Pérez Neira, David Abad González, Julio STYLES OF MANAGEMENTS LCA ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY AGROFORESTRY ORGANIC FARMING SUSTAINABILITY Cocoa is one of the most important crops in Ecuador, especially in the Ecuadorian Amazon, where >60,000 ha are dedicated to cocoa; 48,600 ha in production in 2021. Most of the cocoa area (82 %) is managed by smallholders with <10 ha under cultivation. Despite the socioeconomic and environmental importance of these systems, there are no previous studies that provide an integrated view of the energy metabolism and economic viability of different smallholder management styles. Consequently, the objective of this work is twofold: a) to estimate the aggregate energy and economic metabolism of small cocoa producers (< 10 ha) in the Ecuadorian Amazon and b) to investigate the existing differences in the technical-economic management styles of the crop. To this end, primary data were collected from a statistically representative sample of cocoa-growing areas distributed among 279 producers in 86 communities in the region, using the life cycle assessment (LCA) methodology and a cost-benefit analysis associated with management. Our data show that most smallholder farmers produce cocoa in low-input diversified agroforest system with a high share of unpaid family labor. At the Amazon level, smallholder farmers (< 10 ha) produced 16.9 million tons of food for the market with a non-renewable cumulative energy demand (NR CED) of 53.8 TJ (1343 MJ/ha), a carbon footprint (CF) of 8.16 Mt. CO2-eq. (203.9 kg CO2-eq/ha), and a net margin of 19.07 million $ (476.8 $/ha). On average, cocoa yields were estimated at 288 kg/ha, resulting in a NR CED and carbon footprint (CF) per kg of cocoa of 4.18 MJ and 0.98 kg CO2-eq. Despite its apparent homogeneity, three distinct styles of crop management were identified by a cluster analysis. The results suggest that farms with good organic/agroecological management can have a similar income generating capacity to the more intensive conventional farms evaluated, but with better environmental outcomes. Consequently, the paper finally discusses the need to promote public actions and policies that allow for the scaling up and improvement of successful agroecological management in the Ecuadorian Amazon. a.- Central Experimental Station of the Amazon of INIAP (National Agricultural and Livestock Farming Research Institute), Ecuador. b.- Dept. of Economics and Statistics, Universidad de Leon, ´ Spain. c.- Institute of Sociology and Peasant Studies (ISEC), Universidad de C´ordoba, Spain. 2023-08-25T15:25:32Z 2023-08-25T15:25:32Z 2023-08-07 Artículo https://doi.org/10.1016/j.spc.2023.08.005 http://repositorio.iniap.gob.ec/handle/41000/6057 en_US Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 Ecuador http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ec/ 12p. application/pdf E. E. Central Amazónica
institution INIAP
collection DSpace
country Ecuador
countrycode EC
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-iniap
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca INIAP
language en_US
topic STYLES OF MANAGEMENTS
LCA
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
AGROFORESTRY
ORGANIC FARMING
SUSTAINABILITY
STYLES OF MANAGEMENTS
LCA
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
AGROFORESTRY
ORGANIC FARMING
SUSTAINABILITY
spellingShingle STYLES OF MANAGEMENTS
LCA
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
AGROFORESTRY
ORGANIC FARMING
SUSTAINABILITY
STYLES OF MANAGEMENTS
LCA
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
AGROFORESTRY
ORGANIC FARMING
SUSTAINABILITY
Caicedo Vargas, Carlos
Gallar, David
Pérez Neira, David
Abad González, Julio
Agroecology as a means to improve energy metabolism and economic management in smallholder cocoa farmers in the Ecuadorian Amazon
description Cocoa is one of the most important crops in Ecuador, especially in the Ecuadorian Amazon, where >60,000 ha are dedicated to cocoa; 48,600 ha in production in 2021. Most of the cocoa area (82 %) is managed by smallholders with <10 ha under cultivation. Despite the socioeconomic and environmental importance of these systems, there are no previous studies that provide an integrated view of the energy metabolism and economic viability of different smallholder management styles. Consequently, the objective of this work is twofold: a) to estimate the aggregate energy and economic metabolism of small cocoa producers (< 10 ha) in the Ecuadorian Amazon and b) to investigate the existing differences in the technical-economic management styles of the crop. To this end, primary data were collected from a statistically representative sample of cocoa-growing areas distributed among 279 producers in 86 communities in the region, using the life cycle assessment (LCA) methodology and a cost-benefit analysis associated with management. Our data show that most smallholder farmers produce cocoa in low-input diversified agroforest system with a high share of unpaid family labor. At the Amazon level, smallholder farmers (< 10 ha) produced 16.9 million tons of food for the market with a non-renewable cumulative energy demand (NR CED) of 53.8 TJ (1343 MJ/ha), a carbon footprint (CF) of 8.16 Mt. CO2-eq. (203.9 kg CO2-eq/ha), and a net margin of 19.07 million $ (476.8 $/ha). On average, cocoa yields were estimated at 288 kg/ha, resulting in a NR CED and carbon footprint (CF) per kg of cocoa of 4.18 MJ and 0.98 kg CO2-eq. Despite its apparent homogeneity, three distinct styles of crop management were identified by a cluster analysis. The results suggest that farms with good organic/agroecological management can have a similar income generating capacity to the more intensive conventional farms evaluated, but with better environmental outcomes. Consequently, the paper finally discusses the need to promote public actions and policies that allow for the scaling up and improvement of successful agroecological management in the Ecuadorian Amazon.
format Artículo
topic_facet STYLES OF MANAGEMENTS
LCA
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
AGROFORESTRY
ORGANIC FARMING
SUSTAINABILITY
author Caicedo Vargas, Carlos
Gallar, David
Pérez Neira, David
Abad González, Julio
author_facet Caicedo Vargas, Carlos
Gallar, David
Pérez Neira, David
Abad González, Julio
author_sort Caicedo Vargas, Carlos
title Agroecology as a means to improve energy metabolism and economic management in smallholder cocoa farmers in the Ecuadorian Amazon
title_short Agroecology as a means to improve energy metabolism and economic management in smallholder cocoa farmers in the Ecuadorian Amazon
title_full Agroecology as a means to improve energy metabolism and economic management in smallholder cocoa farmers in the Ecuadorian Amazon
title_fullStr Agroecology as a means to improve energy metabolism and economic management in smallholder cocoa farmers in the Ecuadorian Amazon
title_full_unstemmed Agroecology as a means to improve energy metabolism and economic management in smallholder cocoa farmers in the Ecuadorian Amazon
title_sort agroecology as a means to improve energy metabolism and economic management in smallholder cocoa farmers in the ecuadorian amazon
publishDate 2023-08-07
url https://doi.org/10.1016/j.spc.2023.08.005
http://repositorio.iniap.gob.ec/handle/41000/6057
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