Sustainable agriculture aims to reduce its environmental impact. The adoption of organic farming is becoming increasingly widespread for field and horticultural crops as one of the leading sustainable farming systems. In this research, a Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) analysis was applied to investigate the actual environmental impact of processing tomato production, in the organic (OS) vs the conventional cropping systems (CS), in a specialized Mediterranean area in Southern Italy for three consecutive years. The study compared the global warming potential (GWP; in term of kg CO2-eq) and primary energy demand (PED; in term of MJ) of processing tomato produced in the two systems. Our results indicate that GWP recorded in OS was on average -40% compared to CS when 1 hectare was adopted as a functional unit (FU). On the other hand, GWP was on average +22% in the OS than in CS if using 1 ton of marketable fruits as FU. A similar impact, highly depending on the choice of the FU, was registered for PED as average of three years. OS showed -38% vs +28% PED than CS, using 1 ha vs. 1 t of marketable fruit. Pesticide and fungicide applications, and soil tillage had the highest impacts among management inputs on GWP and PED, in both farming systems. Hence, the environmental efficiency of these practices should be largely improved in the production of processing tomato if aiming to sustainable farming. In conclusion, the differences of sustainability observed between the two farming systems were mainly due to the far lower marketable yield recorded in the OS vs the CS. Therefore, the priority future challenge of organic tomato farming should be the reduction of the yield gap between the OS and the CS, through the development of both new genotypes and of innovative management methods, designed to reduce the gap, but not increasing the environmental impacts on the agro-ecosystem.
AbstractSustainable agriculture aims to reduce its environmental impact. In this research, a Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) analysis was applied to investigate the actual environmental impact of processing tomato production, in the organic (OS) vs the conventional cropping systems (CS), in a specialized Mediterranean area in Southern Italy for three consecutive years. The study compared the global warming potential (GWP; in term of kg CO2-eq) and primary energy demand (PED; in term of MJ) of processing tomato produced in the two systems. Our results indicate that GWP recorded in OS was on average -40% compared to CS when 1 hectare was adopted as a functional unit (FU). On the other hand, GWP was on average +22% in the OS than in CS if using 1 ton of marketable fruits as FU. A similar impact, highly depending on the choice of the FU, was registered for PED as average of three years. OS showed -38% vs +28% PED than CS, using 1 ha vs. 1 t of marketable fruit. Pesticide and fungicide applications, and soil tillage had the highest impacts among management inputs on GWP and PED, in both farming systems. Hence, the environmental efficiency of these practices shou...