1 research outputs found
Environmental impact of heavy pig production in a sample of Italian farms. A cradle to farm-gate analysis
Four breeding piggeries and eight growing-fattening piggerieswere analyzed to estimate potential environmental
impacts of heavy pig production (N160 kg of live height at slaughtering). Life Cycle Assessment methodology
was adopted in the study, considering a system from breeding phase to growing fattening phase. Environmental
impacts of breeding phase and growing-fattening phasewere accounted separately and then combined to obtain
the impacts of heavy pig production. The functional unit was 1 kg of live weight gain. Impact categories investigated
were global warming (GW), acidification (AC), eutrophication (EU), abiotic depletion (AD), and photochemical
ozone formation (PO).
The total environmental impact of 1 kg of live weight gain was 3.3 kg CO2eq, 4.9 E−2 kg SO2eq, 3.1 E−2 kg
PO4 3−eq, 3.7 E−3 kg Sbeq, 1.7 E−3 kg C2H4eq for GW, AC, EU, AD, and PO respectively.
Feed production was the main hotspot in all impact categories. Greenhouse gases responsible for GWwere mainly
CH4, N2O, and CO2. Ammonia was the most important source of AC, sharing about 90%. Nitrate and NH3 were
the main emissions responsible for EU, whereas P and NOx showed minor contributions. Crude oil and natural
gas consumption was the main source of AD. A large spectrum of pollutants had a significant impact on PO: they comprised CH4 from manure fermentation, CO2 caused by fossil fuel combustion in agricultural operations
and industrial processes, ethane and propene emitted during oil extraction and refining, and hexane used in soybean
oil extraction. The farm characteristics that best explained the results were fundamentally connected with
performance indicators Farms showed a wide variability of results, meaning that there was wide margin for improving
the environmental performance of either breeding or growing-fattening farms. The effectiveness of some
mitigation measures was evaluated and the results that could be obtained by their introduction have been
presented