The principal objections to the proposition that
organic agriculture can contribute significantly to the global food
supply are low yields and insufficient quantities of organically
acceptable fertilizers. We evaluated the universality of both claims.
For the first claim, we compared yields of organic versus conventional
or low-intensive food production for a global dataset of 293 examples
and estimated the average yield ratio (organic:non-organic) of
different food categories for the developed and the developing world.
For most food categories, the average yield ratio was slightly <1.0
for studies in the developed world and >1.0 for studies in the
developing world. With the average yield ratios, we modeled the global
food supply that could be grown organically on the current agricultural
land base. Model estimates indicate that organic methods could produce
enough food on a global per capita basis to sustain the
current human population, and potentially an even larger population,
without increasing the agricultural land base. We also evaluated the
amount of nitrogen potentially available from fixation by leguminous
cover crops used as fertilizer. Data from temperate and tropical
agroecosystems suggest that leguminous cover crops could fix enough
nitrogen to replace the amount of synthetic fertilizer currently in
use. These results indicate that organic agriculture has the potential
to contribute quite substantially to the global food supply, while
reducing the detrimental environmental impacts of conventional
agriculture. Evaluation and review of this paper have raised important
issues about crop rotations under organic versus conventional
agriculture and the reliability of grey-literature sources. An ongoing
dialogue on these subjects can be found in the Forum editorial of this
issue.
(Accepted June 09 2006)