Practical Ways to Assess Sustainability

Agroscope has developed the foundation of a methodology for assessing the sustainability of Swiss farms. From summer 2016, a set of indicators will be tested on around ten farms. Sustainably managed farms form an important basis for healthy, fit-for-the-future food production.

The assessment of a farm’s sustainability is a vital step in its optimisation. Here, equal consideration must be given to the criteria concerning the three dimensions of environment, economy and society. Agroscope has developed appropriate indicators, and published these in May 2016 in the ‘Agroscope Science’ publication series.

These indicators are the foundation for enabling farmers, consumers and associations as well as interested actors and stakeholders from production, processing and trade to develop a comprehensive farm sustainability assessment. Particular attention is devoted by Agroscope to the social dimension. This field still lacks sufficient resilient and practical indicators that are tailor-made for Swiss farms.

Well-being concept for human well-being

Four project teams developed indicators for assessing social sustainability, with a focus on the three areas of human well-being, animal welfare, and landscape aesthetics. Here, it was shown that the Well-being Concept of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) represents a good basis for depicting the various aspects of human well-being. To this end, key questions allowing the relevant topics to be described simply and concisely were developed for each sub-aspect such as e.g. work/life balance, social relationships and subjective well-being. 

Owing to the relevance of the topic for agriculture, a project team devoted itself to the calculation of temporal workload. On the basis of the ‘ART Work Budget’ software developed by Agroscope to calculate the expected working time, we derived an indicator by comparing the theoretically derived working-time input and the workforce available on the farm. 

Point system for animal welfare

A further project team noted that using a simple indicator to assess animal welfare cannot cover all of the requirements. The researchers therefore propose a point system that manages without observations or measurements on the animal itself. In this system, points are awarded to measures with an anticipated positive impact on one of the twelve animal welfare aspects taken into account in the existing Welfare®-Quality Protocol measuring instrument, e.g. freedom of movement or the absence of pain.  In order for points to be awarded, the anticipated animal welfare must go beyond the minimum stipulated in the Swiss Animal Protection Law. Follow-up projects will now aim to determine whether a correlation does in fact exist between the number of points awarded and the level of animal welfare.

Indicators for the economy and environment

Agroscope has also developed indicators for the economic and environmental dimensions; detailed information on these can be found in the relevant Agroscope publication of May 2016. The economic sustainability of a farm can be illustrated by two key figures in each of the following areas: profitability (earned income per family labour unit and total return on capital); liquidity (cashflow-turnover rate and dynamic gearing ratio), and stability (investment intensity and investment coverage). The environmental dimension of sustainability encompasses the components of resource efficiency, effects on climate, nutrients, and ecotoxicity, as well as biodiversity and soil quality. 

Practicability, utility, acceptance

Practical testing of the indicator set is carried out in close cooperation with the involved farmers. The test determines the practicability, utility and acceptance of a sustainability assessment at farm level. In addition to the refinement of the indicator set, a scientific analysis of the results is planned. The project will be concluded with an in-depth report at the end of 2019. The results obtained are meant to contribute to the implementation of a practical solution for assessing sustainability on a large number of farms. The project is financially supported by the Migros Cooperative Association (MGB). IP-Suisse is actively involved in data acquisition.

Further information:

Project number: 22.14.19.09.01

Environmental Monitoring and Communication

In diesem Projekt wird untersucht, wie sich die landwirtschaftlichen Praktiken und ihr Einfluss auf die Umwelt über die Zeit verändern und bietet damit eine wichtige Grundlage für die Politik und die Überprüfung der Erreichung agrarumweltpolitischer Ziele (z.B. Absenkpfade Nährstoffe). Das Agrarumweltmonitoring stellt diese zeitlichen Trends mithilfe verschiedener Agrarumweltindikatoren für Regionen sowie Betriebstypen dar. Im Rahmen eines Weiterentwicklungsprojekts wird das Agrarumweltmonitoring neu ausgerichtet, um möglichst viele bestehende Daten zu nutzen und neue Datenquellen aus Fernerkundungsprodukten und Farm-Management-Informationssystemen zu erschliessen. Zusätzlich zum Agrarumweltmonitoring wird ein Monitoring auf der Ebene von Nahrungsmitteln eingeführt.

Last Name, First Name Location
Aasen Helge Reckenholz
Baumgartner Simon Reckenholz
Blaser Silvio Reckenholz
Bretscher Daniel Reckenholz
Douziech Mélanie Reckenholz
Gilgen Anina Reckenholz
Graf Lukas Reckenholz
Liebisch Frank Reckenholz
Merbold Lutz Reckenholz
Schneuwly Jérôme Reckenholz
Spiess Ernst Reckenholz

Aasen H.
10 years at the intersection of plant phenotyping and remote sensing.
In: Optimal and cost-effective UAV sensor synergies for trait-based field phenotyping and precision agriculture. 8 May, Publ. PANGEOS, Poznan (PL). 2024.

Ledain S., Stumpf F., Gilgen A., Aasen H.
Radiative transfer model-based LAI retrieval from Sentinel-2 data through machine learning, adding phenological constraints and soil information.
In: EGU General Assembly. 14 - 19 April, Vienna. 2024, 1.

Larcher D., Ledain S., Aasen H.
Comparing radiative transfer model-based LAI retrieval with in-situ observations and mechanistic modelling for grassland growth assessment.
In: EGU General Assembly. 14 - 19 April, Vienna. 2024, 1.

Beal T., Gardner C., Herrero M., Iannotti L., Merbold L., Nordhagen S., Mottet A.
Friend or foe? The Role of animal-source foods in healthy and environmentally sustainable diets.
Journal of Nutrition, 153, (2), 2023, 409-425.

Kooistra L., Aasen H., et al., Berger K.
Reviews and syntheses: Remotely sensed optical time series for monitoring vegetation productivity.
Biogeosciences Discussions, In Press, 2023, 1-67.

Graf L., Merz Q., Walter A., Aasen H.
Insights from field phenotyping improve satellite remote sensing based in-season estimation of winter wheat growth and phenology.
Remote Sensing of Environment, 299, 2023, 1-16.

Gilgen A., Felder R., Baumgartner S., Herzog F., Jeanneret P., Séchaud R., Paunovic S., Merbold L., Lucantoni D., Cluset R., Mottet A.
How to assess the agroecological status of Swiss farming systems?: Application of the Tool for Agroecology Performance Evaluation (TAPE) and further development.
Agroscope Science, 172, 2023, 1-52.

Kohler F., Baumgartner S.
Regionalisierung der N- und P-Bilanzen: Komplementäre Machbarkeitsstudien beim BFS und AGROSCOPE.
In: AgrStat Begleitgruppensitzung BFS. 30. Oktober, Neuchatel. 2023, 1-24.

Baumgartner S.
The Swiss agri-environmental data network (SAEDN).
In: Pacioli Workshop. 2 October, Ptuj. 2023, 1-16.

Drake T. W., Barthel M., Mbongo C. E., Mpambi D. M., Baumgartner S., Botefa C. I., Bauters M., Kurek M. R., Spencer R. G. M., McKenna A. M., Haghipour N., Ekamba G. L., Wabakanghanzi J. N., Eglinton T. I., Van Oost K. and others
Hydrology drives export and composition of carbon in a pristine tropical river.
Limnology and Oceanography, In Press, 2023, 1-16.

Blaser S., Gilgen A., Baumgartner S., Schneuwly J.
Ein barto-Baustein für MAUS.
In: 46. Agrarökonomie-Tagung. 21. November, Publ. Agroscope, Tänikon (CH). 2023, 1-24.

Baumgartner S., Schneuwly J.
Einführung Georeferenzierungsprojekt der ZA-AUI Parzellen.
In: Treuhändertagung. 31. Januar, Olten. 2023.

Gilgen A., Blaser S., Schneuwly J., Liebisch F., Merbold L.
The Swiss agri-environmental data network (SAEDN): Description and critical review of the dataset.
Agricultural Systems, 205, 2023, 1-9.

Merz Q., Walter A., Aasen H.
Using high-resolution drone data to assess apparent agricultural field heterogeneity at different spatial resolutions.
In: 42. GIL-Jahrestagung, Künstliche Intelligenz in der Agrar- und Ernährungswirtschaft. 22. Februar, Publ. Gesellschaft für Informatik e.V., 2022, 195-200.

Graf L., Aasen H., Perich G.
EOdal: An open-source Python package for large-scale agroecological research using Earth Observation and gridded environmental data.
Computers and Electronics in Agriculture, 203, 2022, 1-5.

Aasen H., Roth L.
Advances in high-throughput crop phenotyping using unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs).
In: Advances in plant phenotyping for more sustainable crop production. Publ. Walter, Achim, Burleigh Dodds. 2022, 179-200.

Graf L. V., Bernardino P., Steinhauser S., Un Nisa Z., Berger K., Ganeva D., Palazón S. B., Verrelst J., Aasen H.
Impacts of radiometric uncertainty on the estimation of land surface phenology metrics.
In: ESA Living Planet Symposium. 23. Mai, Publ. European Space Agency, Bonn. 2022, 1.

Merz Q. N., Walter A., Maier R., Hörtnagl L., Buchmann N., Kirchgessner N., Aasen H.
Relationship of leaf elongation rate of young wheat leaves, gross primary productivity and environmental variables in the field with hourly and daily temporal resolution.
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, 320, 2022, 1-10.

Nachhaltigkeit Kuhstall
Measuring environmental impacts: The new emissions test barn in Tänikon makes a useful contribution to sustainability research.
Nachhaltigkeit Bauernfrühstück Tische
A social affair: During a chat – here, over morning coffee – problems are aired, solutions discussed, and interpersonal relationships fostered.
Nachhaltigkeit Mähdrescher
Cost-efficient: The use of modern electronics will improve efficiency during harvesting in the future.
Nachhaltigkeit Silofutter
A biogas plant produces renewable energy and improves the sustainability of a farm.