Key projects objects are the assessment of the contribution of agrobiodiversity to the economic resilience of the agriculture sector and the valuation of policies for the conservation of agrobiodiversity.
The econometric analysis explores whether farmland value (long run agricultural productivity) is affected by agrobiodiversity both at local scale and at regional scale. Agrobiodiversity is measured by richness of agricultural land cover types, their even distribution and the Shannon index. It also includes seasonal climate to understand how precipitation and temperatures affect farmland values. The results support the literature on climate change impact on agriculture, seasonal climate affects farmland value and effects are not evenly distributed. However, the focus of the econometric work is on the effect of local and regional agrobiodiversity on farmland values. Agrobiodiversity affect farmland values and the effect is often nonlinear. The effect of regional agrobiodiversity is larger than the effect of local agrobiodiversity. The Shannon index and evenness have a convex effect on farmland value and richness has a concave effect on farmland value. These complex effects are introduced into ICES CGE model to determine how the economy would respond if agrobiodiversity was increased by about 10%. Results show substantial economic impacts on the agricultural sector, although they differ greatly among measures of agrobiodiversity and their scale. Direct impact propagates to the whole economy affecting considerably the food industry and the services sector of the region where the change occurs, but also of the neighboring regions. Results, however, are not predicted to be the same across southern Europe. In particular, agrobiodiversity often has the opposite effect on France and Italy compared to Spain and Portugal and Greece. The study finds that the overall effect of agrobiodiversity on GDP is quite similar to the direct effect predicted in the agriculture sector.
Outcomes are firstly of academic relevance and accordingly have been and will continue to be disseminated and exploited through research papers on peer-reviewed journals. Two research papers have been completed. The first paper is based on the results of the econometric analysis and it is under the final review in the Ecological Economics journal. The second paper couples the econometric and CGE analysis to assess the value of agrobiodiversity. These results have been also disclosed to targeted audience and the general public through a variety of activities. Articles on newspapers and podcast, online seminars and webinar, Informative speeches to policy maker, international conferences. In addition the fellow has been awarded with the 2021 Bologna Award –The International Sustainability and Food Award.