000102163 001__ 102163
000102163 005__ 20230519145440.0
000102163 0247_ $$2doi$$a10.3390/su13063264
000102163 0248_ $$2sideral$$a124106
000102163 037__ $$aART-2021-124106
000102163 041__ $$aeng
000102163 100__ $$aBoulanger, P.
000102163 245__ $$aEuropean union agricultural support ‘coupling’ in simulation modelling: measuring the sustainability impacts
000102163 260__ $$c2021
000102163 5060_ $$aAccess copy available to the general public$$fUnrestricted
000102163 5203_ $$aOver the last twenty years, the Common Agricultural Policy of the European Union has evolved into a multifunctional policy instrument. As part of this transformation, most farmer receipts are paid independently of production, granting this class of payment production-neutral or ‘fully decoupled’ status. In prospective agricultural market studies, simulation models routinely represent these payments as decoupled, despite academic evidence to the contrary that posits a number of ‘coupling-channels’. To explore the ramifications of differing degrees of coupling on the three pillars of sustainability, a natural-resources focused simulation model is employed. Comparing with a ‘standard’ decoupled baseline to 2030, higher coupling increases global agricultural employment and reduces production intensity on European Union agricultural land and agricultural emissions. Higher coupling also diminishes the Common Agricultural Policy’s capacity as a safety-net for European Union food-security and agricultural employment, whilst there is tentative evidence of increasing emissions ‘leakage’. At the very least, if the non-distorting status of decoupled payments is mis-specified, this has direct implications for the design of greener policy initiatives under the auspices of the Green Deal that promote sustainable fairer trade. As a result, further empirical research on the production distorting effects of the European Union’s decoupled payments is needed.
000102163 536__ $$9info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ES/DGA/S01-20R$$9info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ES/INIA-FEDER/RTA2017-00046-00-00
000102163 540__ $$9info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess$$aby$$uhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/
000102163 590__ $$a3.889$$b2021
000102163 592__ $$a0.664$$b2021
000102163 594__ $$a5.0$$b2021
000102163 591__ $$aENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES$$b57 / 128 = 0.445$$c2021$$dQ2$$eT2
000102163 593__ $$aEnergy Engineering and Power Technology$$c2021$$dQ1
000102163 591__ $$aENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES$$b133 / 279 = 0.477$$c2021$$dQ2$$eT2
000102163 593__ $$aRenewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment$$c2021$$dQ1
000102163 591__ $$aGREEN & SUSTAINABLE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY$$b35 / 47 = 0.745$$c2021$$dQ3$$eT3
000102163 593__ $$aManagement, Monitoring, Policy and Law$$c2021$$dQ1
000102163 591__ $$aGREEN & SUSTAINABLE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY$$b7 / 9 = 0.778$$c2021$$dQ4$$eT3
000102163 593__ $$aGeography, Planning and Development$$c2021$$dQ1
000102163 655_4 $$ainfo:eu-repo/semantics/article$$vinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
000102163 700__ $$aBoysen-Urban, K.
000102163 700__ $$0(orcid)0000-0003-1727-2240$$aPhilippidis, G.
000102163 773__ $$g13, 6 (2021), 3264 [17 pp.]$$pSustainability (Basel)$$tSustainability (Switzerland)$$x2071-1050
000102163 8564_ $$s1201052$$uhttps://zaguan.unizar.es/record/102163/files/texto_completo.pdf$$yVersión publicada
000102163 8564_ $$s2842145$$uhttps://zaguan.unizar.es/record/102163/files/texto_completo.jpg?subformat=icon$$xicon$$yVersión publicada
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000102163 951__ $$a2023-05-18-14:31:14
000102163 980__ $$aARTICLE