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Unlocking the unsustainable rice-wheat system of Indian Punjab : assessing alternatives to crop-residue burning from a systems perspective

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Date
05/2022
Author
Downing, Andrea S.
Kumar, Manish
Andersson, August
Causevic, Amar
Gustafsson, Örjan
Joshi, Niraj U.
Krishnamurthy, Chandra Kiran B.
Scholtens, Bert
Crona, Beatrice
Keywords
Crop residue burning
Black carbon emissions
Atmospheric Brown Cloud
Value chain analysis
Causal loop diagrams
Lock-in
HD Industries. Land use. Labor
S Agriculture (General)
3rd-DAS
SDG 2 - Zero Hunger
SDG 13 - Climate Action
SDG 15 - Life on Land
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Abstract
Crop residue burning in Indian Punjab emits particulate matter with detrimental impacts on health, climate and that threaten agricultural production. Though legal and technological barriers to residue burning exist – and alternatives considered more profitable to farmers – residue burning continues. We review black carbon (BC) emissions from residue burning in Punjab, analyse social-ecological processes driving residue burning, and rice and wheat value-chains. Our aims are to a) understand system feedbacks driving agricultural practices in Punjab; b) identify systemic effects of alternatives to residue burning and c) identify companies and financial actors investing in agricultural production in Punjab. We find feedbacks locking the system into crop residue burning. The Government of India has greatest financial leverage and risk in the current system. Corporate stakeholders have little financial incentive to enact change, but sufficient stakes in the value chains to influence change. Agricultural policy changes are necessary to reduce harmful impacts of current practices, but insufficient to bringing about sustainability. Transformative changes will require crop diversification, circular business models and green financing. Intermediating financial institutions setting sustainability conditions on loans could leverage these changes. Sustainability requires the systems perspective we provide, to reconnect production with demand and with supporting environmental conditions.
Citation
Downing , A S , Kumar , M , Andersson , A , Causevic , A , Gustafsson , Ö , Joshi , N U , Krishnamurthy , C K B , Scholtens , B & Crona , B 2022 , ' Unlocking the unsustainable rice-wheat system of Indian Punjab : assessing alternatives to crop-residue burning from a systems perspective ' , Ecological Economics , vol. 195 , 107364 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2022.107364
Publication
Ecological Economics
Status
Peer reviewed
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2022.107364
ISSN
0921-8009
Type
Journal article
Rights
Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Description
This work was funded by Formas (Project # 2018-01824), and through the generous support of the Erling-Persson Family Foundation to the Global Economic Dynamics and the Biosphere, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Sweden.
Collections
  • University of St Andrews Research
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10023/25030

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