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Factors Affecting the Adoption of Environmental
Management Systems by Crop and Livestock Farms in Canada
Udith K. Jayasinghe-Mudalige and Alfons Weersink *
ABSTRACT
This study examines, both qualitative and
quantitatively, the motivation for crop, livestock, and mixed (both
crop and livestock) farms in Canada to behave environmentally
responsibly by adopting Environmental Management Systems (EMS) in the
farm and the impact of a number of human capital, financial, farm
structure, and social characteristics of the farmer and/or the
farm on this behavior. It uses the data from 16,053 farms that
responded to the Farm Environmental Management Survey conducted by
Statistics Canada and Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada in 2001, which
collects information on implementation of EMS in the areas manure,
fertilizer, pesticide, water, wildlife, grazing, and nutrient
management in the farm.The outcome of analysis show that mixed farms
have the highest adoption rates, in general, across the eight EMSs
considered in this study, while livestock-only farms have the lowest.
The most common EMSs used by all farms are fertilizer and pesticide
management plans with the whole farm environmental plan as the least
likely to be adopted. The results based on a regression analysis
suggest that “young” and “rich” farmers with a “large” land extent tend
to adopt as
many as possible EMS, but the gender of the farmer does not show a
significant impact on this behaviour. The level of urbanization and
government regulation also affects significantly the level of adoption
of EMSs. The analysis, as a whole, points out that even in the absence
of “mandatory” national level policies to regulate agricultural farms
in Canada, farmers show
a tendency to adopt as much as possible EMS “voluntarily”, because of
their own interests in the farming environment and/or motives
originating from the market where they operated with.
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* The authors are respectively, Senior
Lecturer, Department of Agribusiness Management, Wayamba University
of Sri Lanka, Makandura, Gonawila-60170, Sri Lanka and
Professor, Department of Agricultural Economics and Business, Guelph
University, Guelph, Canada N1G 2W1 .
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Jayasinghe-Mudalige
and Weersink 2004. Sri Lankan
Journal of
Agricultural Economics. Volume 6 (1). Pp. 25 - 36
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