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Identifying barriers to sustainable apple production: A stakeholder perspective.

Authors :
Jin, Shan
Li, Wenjing
Cao, Yiying
Jones, Glyn
Chen, Jing
Li, Zhenhong
Chang, Qian
Yang, Guijun
Frewer, Lynn J.
Source :
Journal of Environmental Management. Jan2022:Part B, Vol. 302, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Apple is one of the most important cash crops in China. However, negative economic, environmental and social impacts are associated with its production. This study aims to apply a holistic systems perspective to understand existing problems associated with apple production in China and use this information to improve its sustainability. A structured survey was administered to farmers (n = 245) in Shandong and Shanxi provinces, combined with semi-structured interviews with apple supply chain stakeholders (n = 25). Themes, dimensions and relationships were identified based on an inductive thematic analysis of interview data, and then triangulated against the survey data. Interpretive Structural Modelling and Cross-Impact Matrix Multiplication Applied to Classification methods were applied to investigate interrelationships and effects of the elicited elements within the system. The results indicated that various environmental, economic and social problems are associated with apple production in China, including environmental and health risks associated with synthetic input applications, yield instability, deterioration of apple quality, farmers' uncertainty about accessing routes to market, and the ageing farming workforce. The interaction of socio-economic and supply chain issues has contributed to the system "lock-in" to unsustainable practices within the apple production system. Existing agricultural policies were ineffective as they did not include policy leverage to mitigate the multiple factors driving lock-in to unsustainable practices within the system. The research has provided evidence to enable policymakers to develop effective and targeted strategies to facilitate sustainable production within the apple production system. In particular, the future policy mix should consider the entirety of the food system including perspectives and requirements of different stakeholders. The three-stage approach applied has demonstrated its feasibility of investigating sustainability issues facing a particular industry within a specific cultural and policy context. [Display omitted] • 21 barriers to Chinese sustainable apple production were identified. • Vicious circles trap different problems in the apple production system. • There exists socio-technical lock-in around existing tools and practices. • Ineffective agricultural policies strongly hinder upgrading apple production. • A three-stage approach was established for researching agricultural sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03014797
Volume :
302
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Environmental Management
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153848839
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.114082