Climate-resilient agriculture helps maintain productivity and stabilize farm incomes while ensuring food security and ecosystem protection in Europe. According to an EEA briefing released today, strategic investment and enhanced governance are essential for supporting farms in their transition.
European agricultural production is under significant pressure from climate change, soil degradation, and increased costs of external inputs like fertilizers, pesticides, irrigation, imported feed, and energy. The EEA briefing “Building climate-resilient agriculture in Europe: an economic perspective” examines 51 European farm-level case studies, demonstrating that climate-resilient agriculture practices may stabilize farmers’ incomes, alongside supporting food security and ecosystems.
Climate-resilient agriculture involves farming approaches that minimize exposure to climate shocks while maintaining long-term economic viability. It offers a comprehensive strategy combining changes in farm-level practices with economic and governance support.
The 51 case studies cover farms from the United Kingdom to Ukraine, with climate-resilient agriculture practices categorized into four areas: soil and water management, crop system diversification, landscape-level management, and livestock system redesign.
A key strategy across these case studies is reducing dependence. One highlighted practice is reduced tillage, which enhances soil structure and water retention, helping farms better handle droughts and heavy rainfall. In the briefing’s case studies, diesel use decreased by about 50%, production costs dropped by approximately 40%, and labor needs were reduced by about 25–30%, depending on the context.
Lessons from the 51 CRA farm transitions indicate that farms are often most economically vulnerable during the transition to climate-resilient systems. While many practices provide public benefits like landscape features and ecosystem services, they offer limited short-term private returns for farmers, necessitating targeted financial and policy support.
In climate-stressed regions, such as southern Europe, resilience measures provide immediate benefits by reducing losses and costs. However, in other regions, benefits may take longer to become evident to farmers. System redesign and public co-investment are needed to manage upfront costs and transition risks in these cases.
For Europe’s food systems and rural economies to remain secure, climate resilience must be a core economic priority. With targeted investment, stronger governance, and improved climate risk monitoring and adaptation, Europe can transition from reactive crisis management to proactive resilience, stabilizing farm incomes and ensuring long-term agricultural productivity.














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