Preprint Review Version 1 Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed

Agri-Environmental Indicators: a Systemic Review to Assess New EU Green Deal Policies

Version 1 : Received: 10 December 2021 / Approved: 13 December 2021 / Online: 13 December 2021 (15:55:03 CET)

A peer-reviewed article of this Preprint also exists.

Salvan, M.G.; Bertoni, D.; Cavicchioli, D.; Bocchi, S. Agri-Environmental Indicators: A Selected Review to Support Impact Assessment of New EU Green Deal Policies. Agronomy 2022, 12, 798. Salvan, M.G.; Bertoni, D.; Cavicchioli, D.; Bocchi, S. Agri-Environmental Indicators: A Selected Review to Support Impact Assessment of New EU Green Deal Policies. Agronomy 2022, 12, 798.

Abstract

Every intervention of planning, implementation, and monitoring of agricultural and agri-environmental policies requires assessment tools that should have the characteristics of relevance, completeness, interpretability, data quality, efficiency, and overlapping. Despite the extensive selection of bibliographies and numerous projects designed to develop agri-environmental indicators necessary for assessing the sustainability of new policies, it is difficult to have an integrated and updated set of indicators available, which can be an effective and practical application tool to assists policymakers, researchers, and actors in policy design, monitoring and impact assessment. Particularly, such need is pressing to face the new environmental challenges imposed by the upcoming European Union Green Deal on the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) post 2023. This study, therefore, aims to fill this gap by proposing a selection methodology and different pools of agri-environmental indicators differentiated based on a scale approach (crop-farm-district-region). Furthermore, we have attempted to validate our approach by quantifying selected indicators for a specific evaluation necessity, represented in this case by an assessment of environmental impact of land use change induced by CAP greening requirements in the Northern Italy context. Results of this validation show original crops’ impacts comparison, but also highlight great knowledge gaps in the available literature.

Keywords

Policy Assessment; Green Deal; EU Common Agricultural Policy; Scaled Indicators; Greening

Subject

Business, Economics and Management, Economics

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