Agroecology Knowledge Hub

Recycling: more recycling means agricultural production with lower economic and environmental costs

Waste is a human concept – it does not exist in natural ecosystems. By imitating natural ecosystems, agroecological practices support biological processes that drive the recycling of nutrients, biomass and water within production systems, thereby increasing resource-use efficiency and minimizing waste and pollution.

Recycling can take place at both farm-scale and within landscapes, through diversification and building of synergies between different components and activities. For example, agroforestry systems that include deep rooting trees can capture nutrients lost beyond the roots of annual crops. Crop–livestock systems promote recycling of organic materials by using manure for composting or directly as fertilizer, and crop residues and by-products as livestock feed. Nutrient cycling accounts for 51 percent of the economic value of all non-provisioning ecosystem services, and integrating livestock plays a large role in this. Similarly, in rice–fish systems, aquatic animals help to fertilize the rice crop and reduce pests, reducing the need for external fertilizer or pesticide inputs.

Recycling delivers multiple benefits by closing cycles and reducing waste that translates into lower dependency on external resources, increasing the autonomy of producers and reducing their vulnerability to market and climate shocks. Recycling organic materials and by-products offers great potential for agroecological innovations.

Database

The impacts of chemical pesticides on the environment, including biodiversity, water, air and soil, and on human health, have become a major concern for civil society and consumers. They are also a major issue for the sustainability of agricultural systems. Recently, the Farm to Fork and Biodiversity European strategies set...
Journal article
2023
In western Burkina Faso, on-farm manure production has long been confined to the edges of houses and cattle pens. With increasing land pressure and the remoteness of fields, manure production was hampered by transport constraints, and a large proportion of raw material needed in manure production, such as crop residues...
Burkina Faso
Innovation
2018
El presente trabajo es un esfuerzo institucional de contextualizar la problemática del SSAN y la contribución de la innovación agroecológica en la Comarca Ngäbe-Buglè (CNB), como parte de la experiencia de intervención del Instituto de Investigación Agropecuaria de Panamá (IDIAP), en los últimos 10 años. Un espacio importante para la...
Panama
Report
2019
This film introduces the concept of Enlightened Agriculture - a way of producing food that is designed to provide good food for everyone, everywhere, without cruelty or injustice and without wrecking the biosphere. It showcases some of the farmers and growers who are putting Enlightened Agriculture into practice and the...
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Video
2017
The case studies follow on from IPES-Food’s 2016 report, From Uniformity to Diversity, which identified the vicious cycles locking industrial food and farming systems in place, despite their severe impacts on human health, economic and social well-being, biodiversity, and climate change. The case studies provide concrete examples of how people are rethinking...
Report
2018