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BANAD: A farm model for ex ante assessment of agro-ecological innovations and its application to banana farms in Guadeloupe
Authors:Jean-Marc Blazy  Philippe Tixier  Harry Ozier-Lafontaine  Jacques Wery
Institution:a INRA, UR 1321 Agrosystèmes Tropicaux, Domaine Duclos, Petit-Bourg F-97170, France
b CIRAD, UPR 26, PRAM - BP 214, F-97285 Lamentin Cedex 2, Martinique, France
c INRA/Université de Toulouse I, UMR 1081, Économie des ressources naturelles LERNA, Université des Sciences Sociales de Toulouse, 21 Allée de Brienne, F-31000 Toulouse, France
d CIRAD, UPR 75, PRAM, BP 214, 97285 Lamentin Cedex 2, Martinique, France
e Sup Agro, UMR 1230, SYSTEM, CIRAD-INRA-SupAgro, F-34060 Montpellier, France
Abstract:The ex ante assessment of innovative agro-ecological innovations is a key step in the development of more sustainable crop management systems. To this end, models are useful tools because they make it possible to rapidly assess numerous innovations in different contexts. Whereas many farm optimisation models focusing on the farmer’s strategic decision to adopt new crop management systems have been published, little attention has been given to the ex ante modelling of the dynamic operational impacts of innovation adoption at the farm level. BANAD, a mechanistic model for such applications, is proposed. It allows the ex ante assessment of innovative management systems including new agro-ecological techniques, while taking into account different farming contexts and policy and market conditions. It includes three components: (i) a crop management system model, (ii) a crop model (SIMBA) and (iii) a farming system model. Our results applied to the ex ante assessment of six innovative banana management systems for three contrasted farm types in Guadeloupe showed that the impacts of agro-ecological innovations, which include rotations, improved fallow, intercropping, pest-resistant cultivar, and an integrated organic system, can vary considerably according to (i) the farm type in which the innovation is integrated, (ii) the nature of the agro-ecological innovations, and (iii) the criteria considered and the temporal horizon of the assessment. Innovative intercropping systems that were effective at the field level in terms of the yield improvement and decreased pesticide use could be problematic at the farm level because they increased the workload and decreased income. The adoption of rotations or improved fallow seemed to be relevant for smallholders but could induce a critical period of 1.5-2.5 years during which income decreased drastically. Under certain conditions of markets and subsidies, very environmentally friendly innovations that are less productive can however be economically effective.
Keywords:Bio-economic farm model  Ex ante assessment  Agro-ecology  Innovation  Adoption  Musa spp    Caribbean
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