Sustainable agricultural management : a systems approach for examining food security tradeoffs
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 2019 === Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. === Includes bibliographical references (pages 118-125). === Estimates suggest that the world needs a 50% increase in food production to meet the d...
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ndltd-MIT-oai-dspace.mit.edu-1721.1-1218812019-07-25T04:18:39Z Sustainable agricultural management : a systems approach for examining food security tradeoffs Jain Figueroa, Anjuli. Dennis McLaughlin. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Civil and Environmental Engineering. Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 2019 Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. Includes bibliographical references (pages 118-125). Estimates suggest that the world needs a 50% increase in food production to meet the demands of the 2050 global population (Tilman et. al. 2011). Cropland expansion is unlikely to be sufficient, and yield improvements that require more inputs may lead to more environmental damage. This work focuses on reallocating limited land and water resources to optimize cropping patterns. By combining optimization methods, surrogate modeling, global data sources, data assimilation, and hydrologic modeling, we identify opportunities for increasing food-crop production and cash-crop revenue, while maintaining sustainability constraints that limit cropland expansion and prevent groundwater depletion. We apply the framework in India's Krishna river basin and find that reallocating resources to meet or exceed current production can lead to 96% gain in net revenue as resources over an estimated current baseline. Resources in this case are moved to high-yielding cash crops. Imposing a self-sufficient southern diet which depends on rice reduces the gains to 77% while imposing a self-sufficient national diet with more emphasis on wheat eliminates all net revenue gains to the region. The approach described in this thesis, highlights the trade-offs between food production, cost and environmental impacts in achieving specified food-security objectives. This research contributes to the field in two ways: 1) it provides a novel method for combining remotely sensed data, surrogate models and optimization to understand agricultural trade-offs, and 2) it furthers the discussion on food and water security and sustainable resource management by demonstrating that resource reallocation with sustainability constraints provides revenue gains in certain situations. by Anjuli Jain Figueroa. Ph. D. Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering 2019-07-22T19:33:37Z 2019-07-22T19:33:37Z 2019 2019 Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/121881 1102638593 eng MIT theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed, downloaded, or printed from this source but further reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission. http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/7582 125 pages application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
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Civil and Environmental Engineering. |
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Civil and Environmental Engineering. Jain Figueroa, Anjuli. Sustainable agricultural management : a systems approach for examining food security tradeoffs |
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Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 2019 === Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. === Includes bibliographical references (pages 118-125). === Estimates suggest that the world needs a 50% increase in food production to meet the demands of the 2050 global population (Tilman et. al. 2011). Cropland expansion is unlikely to be sufficient, and yield improvements that require more inputs may lead to more environmental damage. This work focuses on reallocating limited land and water resources to optimize cropping patterns. By combining optimization methods, surrogate modeling, global data sources, data assimilation, and hydrologic modeling, we identify opportunities for increasing food-crop production and cash-crop revenue, while maintaining sustainability constraints that limit cropland expansion and prevent groundwater depletion. We apply the framework in India's Krishna river basin and find that reallocating resources to meet or exceed current production can lead to 96% gain in net revenue as resources over an estimated current baseline. Resources in this case are moved to high-yielding cash crops. Imposing a self-sufficient southern diet which depends on rice reduces the gains to 77% while imposing a self-sufficient national diet with more emphasis on wheat eliminates all net revenue gains to the region. The approach described in this thesis, highlights the trade-offs between food production, cost and environmental impacts in achieving specified food-security objectives. This research contributes to the field in two ways: 1) it provides a novel method for combining remotely sensed data, surrogate models and optimization to understand agricultural trade-offs, and 2) it furthers the discussion on food and water security and sustainable resource management by demonstrating that resource reallocation with sustainability constraints provides revenue gains in certain situations. === by Anjuli Jain Figueroa. === Ph. D. === Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering |
author2 |
Dennis McLaughlin. |
author_facet |
Dennis McLaughlin. Jain Figueroa, Anjuli. |
author |
Jain Figueroa, Anjuli. |
author_sort |
Jain Figueroa, Anjuli. |
title |
Sustainable agricultural management : a systems approach for examining food security tradeoffs |
title_short |
Sustainable agricultural management : a systems approach for examining food security tradeoffs |
title_full |
Sustainable agricultural management : a systems approach for examining food security tradeoffs |
title_fullStr |
Sustainable agricultural management : a systems approach for examining food security tradeoffs |
title_full_unstemmed |
Sustainable agricultural management : a systems approach for examining food security tradeoffs |
title_sort |
sustainable agricultural management : a systems approach for examining food security tradeoffs |
publisher |
Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/121881 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT jainfigueroaanjuli sustainableagriculturalmanagementasystemsapproachforexaminingfoodsecuritytradeoffs |
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