Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/39234

Title: Assessing Agricultural Systems Using Emergy Analysis: A Bibliometric Review
Authors: Marinheiro, Joana
Serra, João
Fonseca, Ana
Marques-dos-Santos, Cláudia
Editors: Zhang, Hailin
Suardi, Alessandro
Keywords: emergy
bibliometric review
agricultural ecosystems
Issue Date: 2-Sep-2025
Publisher: Agronomy
Citation: Marinheiro, J.; Serra, J.; Fonseca, A.; Marques-dos-Santos, C.S.C. Assessing Agricultural Systems Using Emergy Analysis: A Bibliometric Review. Agronomy 2025, 15, 2110. https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy15092110
Abstract: Sustainable intensification requires metrics that are able to capture both economic performance and the often-hidden environmental inputs that support agriculture. Emergy analysis (EmA) meets this need by converting all inputs—free environmental flows and purchased goods/services—into a common unit (solar emjoules, sej). We conducted a PRISMA-documented bibliometric review of EmA in agroecosystems (Web of Science + Scopus, 2000–2022) using Bibliometrix and synthesized farm-scale indicators (ELR, EYR, ESI, %R). Our results show output has grown but is concentrated in a few countries (China, Italy and Brazil) and journals, with farm-level assessments dominating over regional and national assessments. Across cases, mixed crop–livestock systems tend to show lower environmental loading (ELR) and higher sustainability (ESI) than crop-only or livestock-only systems. %R is generally modest, indicating continued reliance on non-renewables, with fertilizers (crops) and purchased feed (livestock) identified as recurrent drivers. Thematic mapping reveals well-developed niche clusters but no single motor theme, consistent with the presence of incongruous baselines, transformities and boundaries that limit comparability. We recommend adoption of the 12.1 × 1024 sej yr−1 baseline, transparent transformity reporting and multi-scale designs that link farm diagnostics to basin and national trajectories. Co-reporting with complementary sustainability assessment methods (such as LCA and carbon footprint), along with appropriate UEV resources, would increase its reputation among policymakers while preserving EmA’s systems perspective, converting dispersed case evidence into cumulative knowledge for circular, resilient agroecosystems.
URI: https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4395/15/9/2110
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/39234
Type: article
Appears in Collections:CHAIA - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica

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