Analyzing the Economic and Environmental Impacts of Agricultural Alternatives - the Case of Virginia's Eastern Shore
The evaluation of production alternatives in agriculture requires a close examination of their economic and environmental impacts. This study was conducted to identify the crops with the highest profit potential given terminal market prices over the last five years, evaluate the feasibility of...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-464792020-09-29T05:41:30Z Analyzing the Economic and Environmental Impacts of Agricultural Alternatives - the Case of Virginia's Eastern Shore Kalo, Altin A. Jr. Agricultural and Applied Economics Taylor, Daniel B. Sterrett, Susan B. Coale, Charles W. Jr. Environmental Economics Horticulture Kenaf Eastern Shore of Virginia The evaluation of production alternatives in agriculture requires a close examination of their economic and environmental impacts. This study was conducted to identify the crops with the highest profit potential given terminal market prices over the last five years, evaluate the feasibility of adopting new crop alternatives, given historical price information and limited production resources, and determine the potential environmental impacts of adopting new cropping strategies in Accomack and Northampton Counties on the Eastern Shore of Virginia. A database of daily terminal price information was created to identify the market windows for specific commodities, their respective high, median and low prices, and their price variability over the last five years. A linear programming model was used to determine optimal farming operations for those farmers that grow only wheat and soybean versus farmers who are willing and able to include vegetables in their crop mix. PLANETOR, an environmental impact computer program, was used to estimate the potential soil erosion, pesticide leaching and runoff, nitrogen leaching, and phosphorous runoff for different scenarios. The model shows that some of the new vegetable commodities could substantially increase the net returns of the farming operations in question. Romaine and Boston Lettuce were consistently selected as the most profitable alternatives while the region's traditional crops offered little competition. Wheat and soybean production showed acceptable levels of soil erosion, as defined by the T-values for the region, and low potential for nitrogen leaching. They did, however, exhibit a higher potential for water contamination, through leaching, or runoff, of high toxicity chemicals. Although lettuce production had higher than recommended soil losses, a well-diversified crop mix offsets its negative impacts at the farm level. Lettuce also uses low toxicity chemicals, decreasing potential health hazard from their leaching or runoff. The introduction of the new vegetable commodities is recommended on the basis of the high profits that they offer, as well as the more positive pesticide leaching and runoff potential. Their final adoption, however, should take place only after establishing a well defined marketing strategy and resolving potential marketing problems. No crop exists that could offer both high profits and have no impact on the environment. Kenaf was thought to be one, but it was soon eliminated on both grounds. This study showed, however, that the new vegetable crops considered may offer better net returns, while they do not necessarily translate into environmental disasters. Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:52:53Z 2014-03-14T21:52:53Z 1997-12-03 1997-12-03 1999-04-21 1998-04-21 Thesis etd-32098-161956 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/46479 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-32098-161956/ etd.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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Environmental Economics Horticulture Kenaf Eastern Shore of Virginia |
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Environmental Economics Horticulture Kenaf Eastern Shore of Virginia Kalo, Altin A. Jr. Analyzing the Economic and Environmental Impacts of Agricultural Alternatives - the Case of Virginia's Eastern Shore |
description |
The evaluation of production alternatives in agriculture
requires a close examination of their economic and
environmental impacts. This study was conducted to
identify the crops with the highest profit potential
given terminal market prices over the last five years,
evaluate the feasibility of adopting new crop alternatives,
given historical price information and limited production
resources, and determine the potential environmental
impacts of adopting new cropping strategies in Accomack
and Northampton Counties on the Eastern Shore of Virginia.
A database of daily terminal price information was created
to identify the market windows for specific commodities,
their respective high, median and low prices, and their
price variability over the last five years. A linear
programming model was used to determine optimal farming
operations for those farmers that grow only wheat and
soybean versus farmers who are willing and able to include
vegetables in their crop mix. PLANETOR, an environmental
impact computer program, was used to estimate the potential
soil erosion, pesticide leaching and runoff, nitrogen
leaching, and phosphorous runoff for different scenarios.
The model shows that some of the new vegetable commodities
could substantially increase the net returns of the farming
operations in question. Romaine and Boston Lettuce were
consistently selected as the most profitable alternatives
while the region's traditional crops offered little
competition. Wheat and soybean production showed acceptable
levels of soil erosion, as defined by the T-values for the
region, and low potential for nitrogen leaching. They did,
however, exhibit a higher potential for water contamination,
through leaching, or runoff, of high toxicity chemicals.
Although lettuce production had higher than recommended soil
losses, a well-diversified crop mix offsets its negative
impacts at the farm level. Lettuce also uses low toxicity
chemicals, decreasing potential health hazard from their
leaching or runoff. The introduction of the new vegetable
commodities is recommended on the basis of the high profits that they offer, as well as the more positive pesticide leaching and runoff potential. Their final adoption, however, should take place only after establishing a well defined marketing strategy and resolving potential marketing problems.
No crop exists that could offer both high profits and have
no impact on the environment. Kenaf was thought to be one,
but it was soon eliminated on both grounds. This study
showed, however, that the new vegetable crops considered
may offer better net returns, while they do not necessarily
translate into environmental disasters. === Master of Science |
author2 |
Agricultural and Applied Economics |
author_facet |
Agricultural and Applied Economics Kalo, Altin A. Jr. |
author |
Kalo, Altin A. Jr. |
author_sort |
Kalo, Altin A. Jr. |
title |
Analyzing the Economic and Environmental Impacts of Agricultural Alternatives - the Case of Virginia's Eastern Shore |
title_short |
Analyzing the Economic and Environmental Impacts of Agricultural Alternatives - the Case of Virginia's Eastern Shore |
title_full |
Analyzing the Economic and Environmental Impacts of Agricultural Alternatives - the Case of Virginia's Eastern Shore |
title_fullStr |
Analyzing the Economic and Environmental Impacts of Agricultural Alternatives - the Case of Virginia's Eastern Shore |
title_full_unstemmed |
Analyzing the Economic and Environmental Impacts of Agricultural Alternatives - the Case of Virginia's Eastern Shore |
title_sort |
analyzing the economic and environmental impacts of agricultural alternatives - the case of virginia's eastern shore |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/46479 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-32098-161956/ |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT kaloaltinajr analyzingtheeconomicandenvironmentalimpactsofagriculturalalternativesthecaseofvirginiaseasternshore |
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