Study: Most Organic Crops Fall Short on Yields

  
   A new study shows organic crops typically yield less than those raised with artificial fertilizers and pesticides. Photo: VOA - S. Baragona.

Lower yields means feeding world organically requires clearing more land

Some organic crops produce nearly as much as conventional agriculture, but most still fall short, according to a new analysis.

With a growing world population and limited land available to feed it, the study has implications for the debate on how to feed the world sustainably.

But some note there is more to sustainability than just crop yields.

Organic advocates say farming without artificial fertilizers and pesticides has less environmental impact.

But skeptics note organic farming generally produces less food per hectare. Lower yields means feeding the world organically would require clearing more land. Deforestation for agriculture is already a major contributor to climate change and biodiversity loss.