2016
DOI: 10.3390/resources5040047
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How Much Time Does a Farmer Spend to Produce My food? An International Comparison of the Impact of Diets and Mechanization

Abstract: Abstract:Work is one of the main inputs in agriculture. It can be performed by humans, animals, or machinery. Studies have shown strong differences throughout the world in labour required to produce a kilogram of food. We complement this line of research by linking these data to food consumption patterns, which are also strongly different throughout the world. We calculate the hours of farm labour required to produce a person's annual food consumption for four scenarios. These scenarios are comprised of two ex… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(12 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
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“…Note that for human labor, there is an ethical dilemma regarding the consideration of farmers’ fair share of food intake as energy input in the EROI calculation (Fluck ; Ibarolla‐Rivas et al. ). In this article, farmers’ labor is accounted for as the primary energy content of the food intake not because farmers are only considered as manpower, but because they are irreducible parts of the production system.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Note that for human labor, there is an ethical dilemma regarding the consideration of farmers’ fair share of food intake as energy input in the EROI calculation (Fluck ; Ibarolla‐Rivas et al. ). In this article, farmers’ labor is accounted for as the primary energy content of the food intake not because farmers are only considered as manpower, but because they are irreducible parts of the production system.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This paper has shown the importance of addressing the trade-off between the use of agricultural resources and the impact of the type of diet and production system. Other studies have shown the trade-off between the use of human labor and machinery for intensive and extensive systems, and for affluent and basic diets [35]. Further studies should estimate the trade-off between other important yield-related inputs such as water and land use.…”
Section: Our Results Within the Broader Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…These production systems generally differ. For instance, the food imports of developing countries with extensive systems (such as LIS in our paper) are generally produced using highly intensive systems [36,37]; in contrast, the affluent food items such as coffee which are imported by developed countries are generally produced with extensive systems in developing countries [35].…”
Section: The Role Of Food Importsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The application energy of agricultural chemicals for the control of selected pests by using the selected three sprayers were estimated from the labour energy required and fuel energy used (calorific value of fuel) for all the applications during the crop season. The total labour energy was then quantified in man hour ha -1 year -1 and converted to MJ ha -1 year -1 (1 man hour = 1.96 MJ) [38,52,50,14,32]. The fuel energy was also expressed in MJ ha for the further calculation of corresponding greenhouse gas emission.…”
Section: Application Energymentioning
confidence: 99%