Open Access Article
Raveena
Kargwal
a,
Yadvika
b,
Anil
Kumar
*cd,
Mukesh Kumar
Garg
a and
Issara
Chanakaewsomboon
e
aDepartment of Processing and Food Engineering, COAE&T, CCSHAU, Hisar, India
bDepartment of Renewable & Bio-Energy Engineering, COAE&T, CCSHAU, Hisar, India
cDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Delhi Technological University, Delhi, India. E-mail: anilkumar76@dtu.ac.in
dCentre for Energy and Environment, Delhi Technological University, Delhi, India
eFaculty of Environmental Management, Prince of Songkla University (PSU), Thailand
First published on 13th September 2022
This study presents the energy assessment of 49 different crops in India, Bangladesh, China, Malaysia, the Philippines, Indonesia, Iran, Turkey, Australia, Nigeria and Thailand. According to the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), these crops were selected from the Indicative Crop Classification (ICC) i.e. cereals, vegetables, fruits, oilseeds, legumes/pulses, fiber and tobacco. The data regarding energy consumption of these crops were collected from articles published between 2001 and 2021. The amounts of energy utilized in diversified crop operations such as tillage, sowing, interculture, fertilization, irrigation, chemical applications, harvesting, threshing and transportation have been discussed. The energy input in terms of direct (manual and animal energy and fuel/diesel) and indirect (fertilizers, pesticides, machinery and seed energy) energy sources for various cropping systems is presented here. Various researchers have extensively examined different operations or sources utilizing more than recommended energy worldwide. In several countries, farmers are in practice utilizing more fertilizers and pesticides than their permitted levels. The energy consumption pattern in wheat production showed Turkey (35
737 MJ ha−1) to be the highest user and Australia (10
900 MJ ha−1) to be the lowest energy user. In rice production, Iran (64
158 MJ ha−1) applied substantially higher while the Philippines applied (12
800 MJ ha−1) slightly lower energy in contrast to other countries, whereas, in millet production, India (7000 MJ ha−1) was the highest and Nigeria (3283 MJ ha−1) was the lowest energy consumer. However, in overall crop production, sugarcane was the highest energy utilizing crop (148
020 MJ ha−1), while wheat (259
000 MJ ha−1) was the highest energy-generating crop. The energy ratio, specific energy and energy productivity of various crops varied between 0.76–29.4, 0.15–26.73 MJ kg−1 and 0.04–6.67 kg MJ−1, respectively.
Environmental significanceThis study would provide valuable information to farmers and policymakers on a global scale, allowing them to recommend appropriate changes in agricultural practices that would result in substantial energy savings in agriculture production. It will also provide valuable information to farmers and decision-makers, emphasizing the importance of energy management in crop production. The amount of energy input and output differed by geographical location and crop type. Conventional energy consumption in agricultural processing has enhanced environmental damage in recent decades. |
Energy analysis is a fundamental and essential requirement for executing any well-defined energy management program.3 Assessment of energy use patterns in crop production is necessary to efficiently use available natural resources, properly manage/conserve energy, and minimize losses during different unit operations. It would help minimize energy costs and waste without affecting production and quality. Thus, energy auditing of crop production would attempt to harmonize energy consumption and its application. It would also distinguish significant energy-consuming operations and sources.4 Based on operations and sources, energy use plans of different cropping systems such as cereals (wheat, rice, barley, millet, sorghum, and corn), pulses (soybean and green gram), cash crops (cotton and sugarcane), oilseeds (groundnut) and horticultural crops (apples, grapes, tomato, eggplant, potato, chili, and cucumber) have been evaluated by various researchers. Variations have been observed for a similar type of crop in different regions of the world. The energy input and output in wheat production ranged between 10
900–35
737 MJ ha−1 and 37
906–1
00
346 MJ ha−1 while in the case of rice, it ranged between 13
616–64
158 MJ ha−1 and 46
200–2
34
393 MJ ha−1.5–9
It is perceived that the energy use pattern in crop cultivation also varies according to the sources of energy, climatic conditions, geographical location, types of crop, etc. The role of these critical factors in the energy requirements of a particular crop in terms of energy input and output should be assessed. There is an urgent need to identify energy-intensive unit operations in different crop production practices.
This work aims to find and critically analyze global energy consumption patterns in different crop production systems such as cereals, cash crops, horticultural crops, oilseed crops etc. The findings of this work will help researchers and policymakers identify the dominant energy-intensive/wasting operations. It would also assist extension specialists in suggesting appropriate procedures and energy sources to producers (farmers and processors) to optimize the input energy and reduce the energy losses. Therefore, it will lead to large-scale minimization of energy losses and aid society in conserving vital natural resources for future generations.
On an agricultural farm, energy is exploited in different forms, such as manual, mechanical, chemical, and electrical energy. Energy sources have also been classified into different categories, as given in Table 1.9 Different types of unit operations carried out on any agricultural field are presented in Fig. 1.
| Types of energy | Energy sources | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| Direct energy | Humans, animals, petrol, diesel, electricity, and irrigation water from canals | 9 |
| Indirect energy | Seeds, farmyard manure, fertilizers, chemicals, and machinery | |
| Renewable energy | Humans, animals, seeds, farmyard manure, and canal water | |
| Non-renewable energy | Petrol, diesel, electricity, chemicals, fertilizers, and machinery | |
| Commercial energy | Petrol, diesel, electricity, chemicals, fertilizers, seeds, and machinery |
The quantum of energy consumption in any crop production and distribution network needs to be significantly optimized to cater to the needs of the ever-proliferating global population and attain societal and fiscal objectives. An accurate energy source at a precise time and location in modern-day agriculture is required for the unified management of natural resources.
| Rank | Different oilseeds | Production in year 2020–21 (million metric tons) |
|---|---|---|
| a Source: https://www.statista.com/statistics/267271/worldwide-oilseed-production-since-2008/. | ||
| 1 | Soybeans | 362.05 |
| 2 | Rapeseed | 68.87 |
| 3 | Peanuts | 47.79 |
| 4 | Sunflower seed | 49.46 |
| 5 | Cottonseed | 41.80 |
| 6 | Palm kernel | 19.96 |
| 7 | Copra | 5.75 |
| Energy source | Unit | Energy equivalent (MJ per unit) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Human labour | |||
| Man | h | 1.96 | 18 |
| Woman | h | 1.75 | 18 |
| Child | h | 0.98 | 18 |
![]() |
|||
| Animal | |||
| Bullock | Pair hour | 14.07 (body weight above 450 kg) | 19 |
| 10.10 (body weight 350–450 kg) | |||
![]() |
|||
| Fuel | |||
| Diesel | L | 56.31 | 18 |
| Agricultural machinery | h | 62.7 | 18 |
| Tractor | h | 10.95 | 18 |
| Farm yard manure | kg | 0.3 | 20 |
![]() |
|||
| Fertilizer | |||
| Nitrogen | kg | 60.6 | 21 |
| Phosphorus | kg | 11.1 | 22 |
| Potash/Potassium | kg | 6.70 | 22 |
![]() |
|||
| Chemical application | |||
| Fungicide | kg | 181.9 | 23 |
| Insecticide | kg | 101.9 | 24 |
| Seed | kg | 14.7 | |
| Electricity | kWh | 11.93 | 25 |
| Water | m3 | 1.02 | 23 |
![]() | (1) |
![]() | (2) |
| Net energy gain (MJ ha−1) = Energy output (MJ ha−1) − Energy input (MJ ha−1) | (3) |
![]() | (4) |
![]() | (5) |
900 MJ ha−1 and 100
346 MJ ha; hence the total energy output for wheat production was around ten times the total energy input with an overall energy efficiency of 9.21%. Chemical fertilizers contributed 47% of the total energy input consumed on wheat-growing farms.5 In some parts of India, wheat is grown under rainfed conditions (without fertilizers and irrigation). This cropping system was studied, and energy consumption was reported to be 2736.46 MJ ha−1 in mechanized and 1774.88 MJ ha−1 in traditional operations.10
Wheat production in different agro-climatic regions of central India consumed 14
345 MJ ha−1 of energy while producing 56
595 MJ ha−1. Out of the total energy input, the share of chemical fertilizers (31.1%) was more than that of diesel (20.5%) and electricity (24.2%). Indirect energy (50.4%) was slightly higher than direct energy (49.6%).17,18 In Turkey, the total energy input in wheat production was 25
876.29 MJ ha−1, leading to an enhanced energy output of 76
990.96 MJ ha−1 with an energy ratio of 2.97. The share of chemical fertilizers was 43.84% of the total energy input, followed by diesel fuel (13.07%) and electricity (11.10%). Other energy inputs were wheat seed (15.06%), irrigation water (13.93%), machinery (1.39%), transportation (0.92%), chemicals (0.48%) and human labour (0.20%). The energy ratio (EUE), energy productivity, specific energy, and net energy in wheat production were 2.97, 0.20 kg MJ−1, 4.94 MJ kg−1, and 51
114.67 MJ ha−1, respectively.27 The total energy consumed by different operations such as tillage, sowing, interculture, irrigation, harvesting, and threshing was 17
159.5 MJ ha−1 in wheat cultivation. The energy ratio, specific energy, productivity, and net energy were 2.21, 7.18 MJ kg−1, 0.14 kg MJ−1, and 20
746.5 MJ ha−1. Major energy-consuming operations in wheat were diesel (44.61%), chemical fertilizers (23.54%), irrigation water (10.58%), seeds (10.11%), machinery (9.86%), chemicals (0.92%) and labour (0.38%).28 The energy output was 84
427.33 MJ ha−1. For wheat production, energy use efficiency, specific energy, energy productivity, and net energy were 2.36, 8.96 MJ kg−1, 0.112 kg MJ−1, and 48
690.20 MJ ha−1, respectively.6 Irrigation water as an energy input was 14.5% greater in wheat under the cotton-wheat system (4093 ± 133 MJ ha−1) than that under the rice-wheat (3576 ± 124 MJ ha−1) cropping system in north-western India. Other energy sources did not play any significant role in energy input. In India, almost 65% of the total surveyed farms were energy-inefficient. Nitrogen fertilizers and excess electricity used for lifting underground water contributed heavily to energy input. A total of 12% of energy input could be saved by optimizing the use of freely available groundwater and N-fertilizers.29
The high energy input in wheat production in Portugal could be substantially reduced with efficient use of resources by adopting no-tillage, reduced use of P2O5, and increased use of irrigation. Among these three options, better results could be expected with no-tillage with reduced energy consumption (45%), reduced GHG emissions (30%), and lowered costs (8%) per ton of wheat produced. The increment in profit was about 24% for no-tillage, 3% for reduced P2O5, and 4% for irrigation.30
116.40 MJ ha−1 and 16
1586 MJ ha−1, with an energy ratio/energy use efficiency of 6.70. Chemical fertilizers consumed 43% of the total energy inputs in paddy growing farms.5 The energy use pattern was studied under different tillage operations in Bangladesh at the Bangladesh Rice Research Institute (BRRI). Paddy grown using power tillers consumed (15
751 MJ ha−1) and produced (147
842 MJ ha−1) more energy than that grown using bullock farming systems (13
781 MJ ha−1 and 127
632 MJ ha−1).7 The total energy input and output (grain + straw) ranged between 19
000 and 26
700 MJ ha−1 and 121
000–1
25
000 MJ ha−1, respectively.31 The effect of irrigation on double-rice cropping patterns was studied in low land areas of the Philippines. The energy input was compared among farmers’ fields, triple-rice systems & diversified rice-based systems and it ranged from 12
400–13
100 MJ ha−1, 12
800–22
800 MJ ha−1 and 15
300–30
900 MJ ha−1, respectively. Out of the total Agricultural Energy Index (AEI), nitrogenous fertilizers and commercial fuel accounted for greater than 60% and 75% in farmers’ as well as experimental fields.8 Energy-exergy analysis conducted in different paddy growing areas of Iran viz. Guilan, Golestan, and Mazandaran showed significant differences in total energy input with agronomical practices such as crop rotation, transplantation time, and land preparation. The total energy input in Golestan province was the highest (64
158.78 MJ ha−1) among the three provinces considered for the study, and that was due to higher diesel consumption (46.44%).24 Energy inputs and outputs were determined in rice crops in Malaysia and yield, total energy input, energy output/input ratio, and energy intensity were 7625 kg ha−1, 16
440 MJ ha−1, 7.76, and 2.16 MJ kg−1. China, India, and Thailand consumed more energy to grow paddy than Malaysia. Major energy consumption was due to conventional energy sources [chemical manure (60%), diesel (17%), pesticides (4%), and machinery (3%)]. The share of renewable resources such as seed, human labor, and organic fertilizers was 15, 0.25, and 0.22%. The B
:
C ratio was 1.37.32 The transplanting method was studied in Raipur, Chhattisgarh (India), on the energy requirements of the rice production system. The total energy consumed by different operations was 13
615.94 MJ ha−1. Fertilizers consumed almost 60% of the total energy used (i.e. 7706.75 MJ ha−1), while intercultural operations consumed the minimum energy. The cost of cultivation was 500 USD/ha and the cost/benefit ratio was 1.96.33 Consumption of energy in paddy cultivation by small, medium and large farmers ranged between 32
400–36
700 MJ ha−1. 60% energy was contributed by direct and 40% energy was contributed by indirect sources in gross energy consumption. However, conventional and non-conventional energy sources contributed 92% and 8% to the total energy input.34 Higher energy use efficiency (by 19%) and higher energy productivity (by 24.8%) were reported in the case of farmers' practices (FPs) as compared to simplified and reduced-input practices (SRIPs). Specific energy reduced from 3.76 MJ kg−1 (FP) to 3.01 MJ kg−1 (SRIPs), indicating a significant enhancement in EUE and reduction in energy utilization with the adoption of more innovative agronomic practices such as SRIPs.9 Varied rice growing approaches were studied in the Indo-Gangetic Plains of India. Since the direct sowing method was found to be better in terms of energy efficiency, it should be suggested to farmers to save water and energy and reduce global warming potential. The global warming potential from rice cultivation has been reported as 467, almost 169% more than from other major cereal crops, thus, becoming a major cause of concern.35
In the western coastal regions of India, different sources contributed 53.64% indirect and 46.16% direct energy during rice production. Diesel (82%) and fertilizers (49%) had the maximum share among direct and indirect energy inputs. There was a substantial difference in the cost/input (19.99 Rs per MJ) and cost/output (0.83 Rs per MJ). The share of conventional energy (72.86%) was about 2.6 times that of non-conventional (27.14%). Irrigation (46%) had a significant share in alternate energy, followed by human resources (30%). The output was contributed almost equally by seeds (52%) and straw (48%). The net energy gain, energy use efficiency, energy productivity, specific energy, and water productivity were 61
738.52 MJ ha−1, 2.22, 1.16 kg MJ−1, 0.86 MJ kg−1, and 9.33 kg m−3. Energy utilization for rice production by small (32
417.7 MJ ha−1), medium (36
471.61 MJ ha−1), and large (36
742.85 MJ ha−1) farmers showed that electricity had the highest share in all operations and farm sizes. Direct energy (60%) used was more than indirect energy (40%). Renewable energy (8%) had a bare minimum share in comparison to non-renewable energy sources (92%).34
701.61 MJ ha−1 and 5766.50 kg ha−1. Chemical fertilizers (55%) and organic manure (FYM, 17.48%) consumed the highest input energy, followed by diesel (14.33%). Indirect (77.37%) and non-renewable (72.42%) energy sources contributed more than 70% to the input energy pool. Simultaneously, direct (22.63%) and renewable (27.58%) energy sources shared more than 20% of input energy. Energy production from straw was 55
447.08 MJ ha−1, with a productivity of 4435.76 kg ha−1.36
Corn silage cultivation was carried out on the Mediterranean coast of Turkey using five tillage treatments (minimum, ridge, band, conventional and no-tillage). Minimum tillage was better than others in terms of yield (49
743.3 kg ha−1), energy ratio (8.78), productivity (2.12 kg MJ−1), and profit (7.78). The total energy input in non-tillage and ridge tillage was 21
505.44 MJ ha−1 and 23
779.95 MJ ha−1.37
314 MJ ha−1 and 8.21. Chemical fertilizers accounted for 29% of the overall energy input.5
100 MJ ha−1, indicating the effect of practices adopted by different farmers on energy use.38 To examine the energy-exergy analysis, five different tillage treatments were tried in rainfed pearl millet cultivation at Hisar, Haryana (India). “No-tillage” treatment showed the lowest energy output/input ratio due to the lowest grain yield, while “low tillage with two intercultural operations” showed the highest ratios of both output–input and B–C, indicating the necessity of this treatment for moisture conservation and weed management, leading to optimum grain yields. This treatment also resulted in an energy output increase of 39.6 MJ (maximum) per unit of energy input added. It was nearly followed by another treatment of low tillage + one interculture + Atrazine spray. An average energy input of 7000 MJ ha−1 was observed for pearl millet production.39 Pearl millet production was studied for three categories of farmers in Nigeria. The energy output (3156 MJ ha−1) of small farmers was less than their input energy (3945 MJ ha−1). There was a difference of around 20% in the input energy of medium (4845 MJ ha−1) and large farmers (6090 MJ ha−1). However, their output energy was observed to have no significant difference (12
597 MJ ha−1 and 12
789 MJ ha−1). The primary direct energy sources were animal draft, manual labor, and fuel energy, while farmyard manure, pesticides, seed, and machinery were the primary indirect energy sources.40 Energy consumption and production were 4785.52 MJ ha−1 and 29
400.00 MJ ha−1 analyzed at the university field in Haryana (India). The maximum share in the total energy input was fertilizers (56%), followed by fossil fuel (29%) and human resources (12%). The energy use efficiency was 6.12.41
663 MJ ha−1. The maximum share of energy consumed is by diesel fuel (72%), followed by seed (13%) and machinery (8%), respectively. The energy ratio and specific energy were 3.04 and 7.55 MJ kg−1.42
026.50 MJ ha−1) and output energy (71
228.86 MJ ha−1) were quite high when economic and sensitivity analysis of soybean production was performed at Kordkuy, Iran. The significant share of petroleum fuel was 66.67%. Fertilizers and irrigation contributed 14.32% and 6.18% while energy use efficiency was 4.62.44
689.59 and 240
072.7 MJ ha−1, respectively. Diesel fuels (43.1 percent), electricity (24.36 percent), and nitrogen fertilizers (12.2%) all had the greatest percentage of input energy (12.2 percent). Energy consumption efficiency, energy productivity, specific energy, and net energy were likewise found to be 4.83, 0.27, 3.68, and 190
383.11 MJ ha−1, respectively. The total energy input was determined to be 10.24 percent renewable and 89.76 percent non-renewable.45
252.02 MJ ha−1) was almost four times higher than the input energy (20
164.36 MJ ha−1). Diesel fuel (43.51%) played a significant role in energy consumption, followed by chemical fertilizers (29.11%).46
945 MJ ha−1 and 49
791 MJ ha−1. Direct and indirect energy contributions in sunflower production were found to be 57.94% and 42.06% of the total energy input. The energy ratio, energy productivity, and specific energy were 2.17, 0.079 kg MJ−1 and 12.52 MJ kg−1, respectively.47
889 MJ ha−1 studied in Iran. The total energy output, energy ratio, energy productivity, and a specific energy for canola production were 89
578 MJ ha−1, 2.9, 0.12 kg MJ−1, and 8.27 MJ kg−1. Fertilization was the highest energy-consuming operation, followed by electricity and diesel energy.47
020 in sesame production in the area of the province of Antalya, Turkey. The total output, net energy, input–output ratio and energy productivity for sesame production were obtained as 12
000 MJ ha−1, 1980 MJ ha−1, 1.8 and 1.76 kg MJ−1.48
248.0, 8720.68 MJ ha−1 and 3488.39 kg h−1, respectively. Chemical fertilization and diesel fuel were the highest energy-consuming operations. The energy input–output ratio was calculated to be 4.53.49
747.06 MJ ha−1 and 67
260 MJ ha−1 in commercial cotton cultivation in India. Energy consumption included fertilizers (5350.74 MJ ha−1), irrigation (4252.50 MJ ha−1), machinery (3814.17 MJ ha−1), diesel fuel (2947.83 MJ ha−1), humans (1128.12 MJ ha−1) and seeds (253.70 MJ ha−1). Energy productivity, specific energy, energy ratio, and net energy were 0.32 kg MJ−1, 3.11 MJ kg−1, 3.79 and 49
512.94 MJ ha−1, respectively.50,59 In Iran, energy expenditure for cotton cultivation was 31
237 MJ ha−1, in which fertilizers, diesel, and machinery had the major share. Greenhouse gas generation (GHG) due to the machine, fossil fuel, and water application was 1195 kg CO2eq. per ha. Energy productivity was 0.11 kg MJ−1 and energy use efficiency was 1.85. The contribution of direct energy (40%) was less than that of indirect energy (60%). As observed in the case of other crops, renewable energy (29%) had a lower share than non-renewable energy sources (71%).51
776 MJ ha−1, whereas productivity was 9960.00 kg ha−1. Indirect and direct sources consumed energy at 78.67% and 21.33%, respectively, during cassava production. The highest energy input was by fertilizers (64.0%), followed by diesel fuel (19.50%). Energy productivity and energy ratio were 1.18 MJ kg−1 and 7.1, respectively.52
020 MJ ha−1) was higher than the unit energy output (112
220 MJ ha−1). The energy ratio and specific energy were 0.76 and 1.59 MJ kg−1, respectively.18 In India, the energy input for sugarcane production varied between 14
480–18
650 MJ ha−1, which consisted of both material (62%) and physical inputs (38%). Seed and chemicals follow fertilizer energy, which had the highest share of input energy. More than 95% of the energy contribution was due to power-operated machinery. Overall energy consumption for sugarcane was the highest (24
680 MJ ha−1).53
In Uttarakhand (India), production energy for sugarcane was higher in tractor cultivated farms than in animal cultivated or mixed farms. The total energy production ranged from 3576–6222 MJ ha−1. Irrigation had the highest consumption. Energy productivity varied between 2.7 and 3.9 kg MJ−1.54
201.75 and 285
600 MJ ha−1, respectively. Chemical fertiliser energy accounts for 41.97 percent, diesel fuel energy for 21.16 percent, irrigation for 11.97 percent, electricity for 11.96 percent, human labour energy for 6.47 percent, equipment energy for 5.53 percent, seed energy for 0.61 percent, and chemical energy for 0.33 percent. The energy input–output ratio and net energy were found to be 8.35 and 251
398.25 MJ ha−1, respectively.55
992.54 MJ ha−1 and the output was 14
679.52 MJ ha−1. The highest energy was utilized in chemical application (74.40%) for walnut production, while the lowest was found in farmyard manure (0.18%). The input–output ratio of walnut production was found to be 0.61.56 In the cases of hazelnuts and pistachios, the total energy consumption was 2862.62 MJ ha−1 and 54305 MJ ha−1 while energy output was 11
255.00 MJ ha−1 and 61
827.0 MJ ha−1, respectively.57,58 The highest energy utilizing operation of a pistachio orchard was electricity, whereas it was diesel fuel (33.84%) for hazelnut production.
819.25 MJ ha−1. Diesel fuel (21.88%) was the most energy-consuming in different operations, followed by compost (17.66%) and electricity (13.09%). Net energy, specific energy, and energy ratio were 7038.18 MJ ha−1, 2.06 MJ kg−1, and 1.16.59 The total energy input (68
928 MJ ha−1) and output (148
380 MJ ha−1) for grape production were comparatively higher than those for apple production. Grape production also resulted in a higher energy ratio (2.27), specific energy (3.76 MJ kg−1), and net energy (79
452 MJ ha−1). In comparison, energy productivity (0.28 kg MJ−1) was slightly lower than for apple production (0.49 kg MJ−1). The contribution of indirect energy was 75%, while that of direct energy was 25%.60
Energy utilization in lemon production was the maximum among the three citrus fruits {orange (60
949.69 MJ ha−1), lemon (62
977.87 MJ ha−1), and mandarin (48, 838.17 MJ ha−1)} in Antalya province, Turkey. Nitrogenous fertilizers (49.68%) had a higher total energy input segment, followed by diesel (30.79%). The energy ratio of lemon (1.06) was slightly lower than that of orange (1.25) and mandarin (1.17). Only 3.74% of the energy sources used was renewable, compared to 95.90% of the non-renewable ones. Orange production had a maximum benefit-cost ratio of 2.37, followed by lemon, indicating it as the most remunerative option for growers among the three citrus fruits.61 In the case of sweet cherry, direct and indirect energy shares were 34.48% and 54.91% of the total input energy. The maximum energy-consuming operations were found in chemical applications (45.35%), especially nitrogen with 38.05%.62 Banana was the fruits' highest direct energy consuming crop (51
560.1 MJ ha−1). The total input and output of banana production were 51
560.1 and 98
024.88 MJ ha−1, respectively. Electricity has the highest share (27.55%) of the total energy input.63
836.76 MJ ha−1. Diesel fuel (41.94%) and chemical fertilizers (19.69%) were the highest energy inputs. Fertilizers (39%), fossil fuel (21%), seeds (14.9%), irrigation (7.5%), and compost (6.4%) consumed enormous energy during potato production.64 Average yield and energy consumption were 28
613.7 kg ha−1 and 92
296.3 MJ ha−1. However, the energy use efficiency, energy productivity, and specific energy were 1.1, 0.3 kg MJ−1, and 3.2 MJ kg−1.60,74 The average yield for glasshouse tomato production was 25
025.4 kg ha−1 in the fall and 22
392.9 kg ha−1 in summer. Overall energy consumption was higher in the fall (81
362.2 MJ ha−1) than in summer (63
023.2 MJ ha−1).16,20 Total input energy and yield were 13
911 MJ ha−1 and 21
290 kg ha−1 for eggplant production in Iran. Energy use efficiency, energy productivity, net energy, and energy intensity were 9.03, 1.53 kg MJ−1, 111
701.33 MJ ha−1, and 5.19 MJ per $.65 In Indonesia, gross energy consumption in tomato cultivation in a greenhouse (GH) (47
620 MJ ha−1) was less than that in an open field (OF) (49
010 MJ ha−1). The total input energy requirements of GH chili {medium (41
550 MJ ha−1) and highland (58
840 MJ ha−1)} and lettuce (24
540 MJ ha−1) were slightly more than those of chili grown in open farms {medium (41
040 MJ ha−1) and highland (57
940 MJ ha−1)} and lettuce (23
870 MJ ha−1). The energy use efficiency ratio was greater in GH (0.45–0.85) than in open farm vegetable cultivation for different crops such as chili and tomato (0.17–0.52). However, this ratio was twice as high in OF lettuce as in the greenhouse one.66
523.32 MJ ha, while the energy output was calculated to be 840 MJ ha. In tobacco production, energy consumption efficiency, productivity, specific energy, and net energy were determined to be 0.03, 0.04 kg MJ, 24.31 MJ kg, and −24683.32 MJ ha, respectively. Direct and indirect energy shares were found to be 47.16% and 52.84%, respectively.
052 MJ ha−1) was more than that in the traditional rice-wheat (50
264 MJ ha−1) system followed by maize-pea–wheat (46
031 MJ ha−1), rice–mustard–greengram (43
614 MJ ha−1) and soybean–wheat (30
859 MJ ha−1). The pigeon pea–wheat system (29
015 MJ ha−1) had minimum energy utilization. In all the cropping systems, chemical fertilizers played a major role in energy consumption followed by water application, machinery, chemical application, human resources, and seed.66 The energy input and output in rice-wheat cropping patterns were found to be 59
152 MJ ha−1 and 164
784 MJ ha−1 whereas a 61
913 MJ ha−1 energy input and 163
272 MJ ha−1 output were found in the rice–maize cropping system.1 The energy ratio of rice–wheat and rice–maize cropping systems was 3.06 and 2.98, respectively.
Energy-exergy analysis of rice–wheat with other cropping systems was compared on flat bed (FB) and raised bed (RB) systems. The rice–potato–wheat cropping system emerged as the highest consumer {75
697 (RB)-77
601 MJ ha−1 (FB)} as well as producer {218
065 (RB)-2
22
836 MJ ha−1 (FB)} of energy. Rice–wheat–sesbania {47
830 (RB)-48
770 MJ ha−1 (FB)} closely followed rice-wheat–greengram {47
482 (RB)-48
414 MJ ha−1 (FB)} in terms of input energy, though, there was approximately a 78% difference in their output energy. The rice–wheat system recorded the lowest output energy {151
862 (RB)-1
56
085 MJ ha−1 (FB)}. Input energy in the flatbed was higher than that in the raised bed.67 Seven year-long studies suggested that agricultural conservation practices were adopted for conserving natural resources, such as zero tillage (ZT) and permanent bed (PB), and compared to traditional tillage (CT) with various maize cropping systems (maize-wheat-mungbean) they emerged as a sustainable option to achieve better biomass productivity, bio-energy yield and energy-use efficiency in India and South Asia. Both ZT and PB fields utilized less energy for water application (16.8–22.9%) and land preparation (49.7–51.5%) and resulted in notably elevated net energy (14.8–18.9%) and energy production (10.6–14.5%). The energy use-efficiency (13.4–17.1%), biomass productivity (9.9–14.1%), and bio-energy yield (17.3–19.8%) were also markedly higher in CA. The maize-wheat–mungbean (MWMb) cropping system was recommended as a better option than a conventional rice-based cropping pattern in the Indo-Gangetic Plains, India. This cropping system, along with agricultural conservation practices with better management of nutrients, would help reduce the large-scale menace of straw burning, energy, and nutritional scarcity and help to reclaim the ever-dwindling biomass productivity and water tables.68 Energy assessment was conducted on maize–wheat–greengram cultivated conventionally and using conservation practices. Zero tillage (89
170 MJ ha−1) consumed 8% less energy than conventional on a flatbed, while on a raised bed, it conserved 91% energy in field preparation and 38% in irrigation. Zero tillage resulted in greater energy use efficiency and productivity, leading to an overall higher output of 387
235 MJ ha−1.69
Energy consumption for maize, rainfed rice, irrigated rice, cassava and wet-season soybean varied from 9790–12
790, 10
090–13
110, 1790–18
490, 4950–9130 and 5210–10
030 MJ ha−1. The dry-season soybean was the minimum, ranging between 5310–7860 MJ ha−1. Material and physical energy inputs accounted for 62% and 38%. Fertilizer energy consumed the highest energy, followed by seeds, pesticides, and herbicides. The physical energy input was more than 97.8% of mechanical power sources.
The energy ratio for different crops varied between 0.76–29.4. Dry and wet-season soybeans had lower energy use efficiency (2.0–3.7), followed by rainfed and irrigated rice. Sugarcane had the maximum efficiency of energy use (9.3–10.1), followed by maize and cassava.54 Conservation agriculture (CA) practices such as zero-till (ZT) with residue management (RM) improved the grain yield of pearl millet (22.3%) and mustard (24.5%) compared to conventional till (CT) without residues, which ultimately resulted in a better net revenue of 1270 US$/ha. Crop residue mulching consumed remarkably higher energy (72.3–87.1%) out of the total consumption. The average energy input, output, and yield of corn in India and Indonesia were found to be 21
270 MJ ha−1, 25
298 MJ ha−1 and 1721 kg ha−1, while in the case of the USA they were 34
448 MJ ha−1, 1
38
180 MJ ha−1 and 9400 kg ha−1.70
Analysis of energy intensiveness and energy use efficiency (energy ratio) of agricultural practices in Bangladesh (1990–2005) showed that total energy production increased from 69
873 to 82
080 MJ ha−1 (14.8% increase) with enhanced energy consumption from 17
940 to 27
100 MJ ha−1 (33% increase). The simultaneous enhancement in energy intensity was 45.67–54.47 MJ per US$. Energy use efficiency for various crops declined (3.97–3.03) with an increased energy input, indicating a faster increase in energy consumption than production. The mechanization index improved from 64% to 78%.71
806 MJ ha−1) as the intensive user of input energy in wheat as compared to the other two countries {India (14
345 MJ ha−1) and Australia (10
900 MJ ha−1)}. However, Australia with 100
346 MJ ha−1 produced a markedly 19.5% extra output energy as compared to Turkey (80
708 MJ ha−1) and India (56
595 MJ ha−1).5,6,17,27,28
Fig. 4(a) and (b) indicate that, though energy utilization for rice cultivation in Iran (60
524 MJ ha−1)24 was 41% higher than that in India (35
210 MJ ha−1), its energy production was 73% lower, showing the inefficient use of energy for rice production in Iran.32 Though India (35
210 MJ ha−1) and China (34
544 MJ ha−1) had a 1.8% difference in their energy inputs for rice production. Still, there was a 39% difference in their energy outputs depicting the effect of geographical location as well as excessive use of energy by China.9 Similarly, the Philippines (17
755 MJ ha−1) and Malaysia (16
440 MJ ha−1) differed by 7.4% in their energy inputs. In comparison, the energy output of Malaysia (127
643 MJ ha−1)32 was almost 45% more than that of the Philippines (70
922 MJ ha−1).8 Bangladesh was the lowest consumer of energy with 15
751 MJ ha−17 but emerged as a more prominent energy producer than Malaysia (127
643 MJ ha−1)17 and the Philippines (70
922 MJ ha−1). The energy output of Bangladesh (56
595 MJ ha−1) was 13.7% and 52% higher energy than that of Malaysia (127
643 MJ ha−1)32 and the Philippines (70, 922 MJ ha−1).8 Iran emerged as the highest energy user among all the countries and Bangladesh has the lowest consumption of energy for rice production (Fig. 4(a) and (b)).
020 MJ ha−1)18 production in cereal crops followed by rice (29
191 MJ ha−1),8,24,32 corn (23
779 MJ ha−1),37 groundnut (20
164 MJ ha−1),46 soybean (18
026 MJ ha−1),10,43,44 cotton (17
747 MJ ha−1),10,43,50 barley (7830 MJ ha−1),7 millet (5081 MJ ha−1) 38–40, sorghum (3555 MJ ha−1) and greengram (3130 MJ ha−1),10 respectively. The energy output was two times more than energy input in all crops except sugarcane, which was lower than energy consumption.
![]() | ||
| Fig. 5 (a) and (b): Global average variation in input and output energy (MJ ha−1) of different crops. | ||
| Crops | Country | Input energy (MJ ha−1) | Output energy (MJ ha−1) | Net energy (MJ ha−1) | Energy ratio | Energy productivity (kg MJ−1) | Specific energy (MJ kg−1) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wheat | Australia | 10 900.80 |
10 0346.40 |
89 445.20 |
9.21 | 1.61 | 0.62 | 5 |
| India | 52 400.00 |
259 000.00 |
206 000 |
5.00 | 0.16 | 6.25 | 29 | |
14 345.00 |
56 595.00 |
42 210 |
3.95 | 0.27 | 3.7 | 17 | ||
| Turkey | 25 876.29 |
76 990.96 |
51 114.06 |
2.97 | 0.20 | 4.94 | 27 | |
17 159.50 |
37 906.00 |
20 746.5 |
2.21 | 0.14 | 7.18 | 28 | ||
35 737.13 |
84 427.33 |
48 690.2 |
2.36 | 0.112 | 8.96 | 6 | ||
| Rice | Australia | 24 116.40 |
16 1586.00 |
137 469.6 |
6.70 | 1.48 | 0.68 | 5 |
| Bangladesh | 15 751.00 (tiller farming) |
147 842.00 |
132 127 |
9.38 | 0.30 | 3.32 | 7 | |
13 781.00 (bullock farming) |
127 632.00 |
113 851 |
9.26 | 0.29 | 3.34 | |||
15 751.00 |
71 589 |
55 838 |
4.54 | 0.30 | 3.23 | 32 | ||
| Malaysia | 16 440.00 |
127 643.00 |
111 203 |
7.76 | 0.46 | 2.16 | 32 | |
| Philippines | 12 800–22 800 (triple-rice system) |
71 600–10 4400 |
58 800–81 600 |
4.94 | 0.15 | 6.46 | 8 | |
15 300–30 900 (diversified rice system) |
46 200–72 600 |
30 900–41 700 |
2.57 | 0.19 | 5.32 | |||
| Iran | 64 158.78 (Golestan) |
89 491.00 |
25 332.22 |
1.39 | 0.064 | 15.62 | 24 | |
62 383.99 (Mazandaran) |
88 179.00 |
25 795.01 |
1.41 | 0.059 | 16.94 | |||
55 031.53 (Guilan) |
91 958.00 |
36 926.47 |
1.67 | 0.070 | 14.28 | |||
| Thailand | 20 471 |
67 291.4 |
46 820.40 |
3.28 | 0.22 | 4.44 | 32 | |
| India | 13 616.00 |
174 953.00 |
161 337 |
2.34 | 6.27 | 12.84 | 33 | |
| 9257.00 | 39 675.30 |
30 418.3 |
4.28 | 0.29 | 3.43 | 32 | ||
32 417.17 (small farmers) |
119 040.60 |
140 835.20 |
5.36 | 0.22 | 4.55 | 34 | ||
36 471.61 (medium farmers) |
167 290.00 |
130 994.80 |
4.61 | 0.19 | 5.25 | |||
36 742.85 (large farmers) |
145 813.00 |
109 282.90 |
3.99 | 0.16 | 6.33 | |||
35 605.00 (puddled transplanted rice) |
156 662.00 |
120 171.00 |
4.40 | 0.20 | 6.40 | 72 | ||
| 7832.00 (direct seeded rice) | 57 173.60 |
45 403.00 |
7.30 | 0.30 | 4.10 | |||
| China | 31 703.00 |
119 040.00 |
87 337.00 |
3.75 | 0.25 | 3.91 | 32 | |
| China | 34 545.00 (FP) |
26 6745.0 (FP) |
232 200 |
7.74 | 0.27 | 3.76 | 9 | |
25 441.5 (SRIP) |
234 393.0 (SRIP) |
208 951.5 |
0.33 | 3.01 | ||||
| Barley | Australia | 7830.00 | 64 314.00 |
56 484.00 |
8.21 | 1.29 | 0.78 | 5 |
| Millet | Nigeria | 3283.00 | 6943.00 | 3660 | 2.02 | 6.67 | 0.15 | 38 |
| 4960.00 | 9514.00 | 4554.00 | 1.84 | 0.28 | 3.57 | 40 | ||
| India | 7000.00 | 69 269.80 |
22 400.00 |
9.63 | 0.26 | 3.72 | 39 | |
| 4785.52 | 29 400.00 |
24 614.48 |
6.14 | 0.41 | 2.39 | 41 | ||
| Sorghum | Ukraine | 11 256.00 |
125 860.00 |
114 604.00 |
11.18 | 0.33 | 3.02 | 73 |
| Corn | Turkey | 23 779.96 |
17 3675.04 |
149 895.08 |
7.30 | 2.12 | 0.89 | 38 |
| Corn | Iran | 68 928.00 |
148 380.00 |
79 452 |
2.27 | 0.28 | 3.76 | 74 |
| Chickpea | Iran | 4826 | 14 663 |
9837.00 | 3.04 | 0.13 | 7.55 | 42 |
| Iran | 18 026.50 |
71 228.86 |
52 202.36 |
4.62 | 0.16 | 9.86 | 44 | |
| Green gram | India | 2697.90 | 18 345.72 |
15 647.82 |
6.80 | 0.26 | 3.8 | 75 |
| Alfalfa | Iran | 49 689.59 |
240 072.7 |
190 383.11 |
4.83 | 0.27 | 3.68 | 45 |
| Groundnut | Iran | 20 164.36 |
79 252.02 |
59 087.66 |
3.50 | 0.21 | 4.74 | 46 |
| Sunflower | Iran | 22 945 |
49 791 |
26 846.00 |
2.17 | 0.08 | 12.52 | 47 |
| Sesame | Turkey | 10 020.0 |
12 000 |
1980 | 1.80 | 0.56 | 1.78 | 48 |
| Soybean | Iran | 27 376.5 |
78 493.1 |
51 116.6 |
3.10 | 0.11 | 9.30 | 25 |
| Peanuts | Iran | 19 248.0 |
87 209.7 |
67 961.6 |
4.50 | 0.18 | 5.52 | 49 |
| Rapeseed | Turkey | 10 485.0 |
76 570.3 |
66 085.2 |
7.30 | 0.20 | 4.89 | 28 |
| Coconut | Turkey | 17 553.00 |
515 208 |
4 97 655.0 |
29.4 | 1.17 | 0.85 | 2 |
| Canola | Iran | 30 889 |
89 578 |
58 689.00 |
2.90 | 0.12 | 8.27 | 47 |
| Cotton | India | 18 550 |
16 838 |
−1712 | 0.90 | 0.90 | 12.9 | 76 |
| Turkey | 17 747.06 |
67 260.00 |
49 512.94 |
3.79 | 0.32 | 3.11 | 50 | |
| Cassava | Nigeria | 8571.26 | 55 776 |
47 204.74 |
7.10 | 1.18 | 0.84 | 52 |
| Sugarcane | Iran | 148 020 |
1 12 220 |
35 800.00 |
0.76 | 0.63 | 1.59 | 18 |
| Thailand | 14 480 |
134 664 |
1 20 184 |
9.30 | 2.94 | 0.34 | 53 | |
| India | 11 494 |
44 836.80 |
33 342.80 |
3.90 | 3.05 | 0.32 | 54 | |
| Sugarbeet | Turkey | 34 201.75 |
285 600 |
2 51 398.25 |
8.35 | 1.98 | 0.55 | 55 |
| Walnut | Turkey | 19 594.3 |
29 567.1 |
26 728.2 |
1.80 | 0.17 | 16.80 | 56 |
| Pistachio | Iran | 29 437.7 |
24 515.3 |
9972.7 | 0.90 | 0.07 | 26.73 | 58 |
| Hazelnut | Iran | 2862.6 | 11 255 |
8392.4 | 3.9 | 0.16 | 6.36 | 57 |
| Tobacco | Turkey | 25 523.3 |
840 | −24 683.3 |
0.03 | 0.04 | 24.31 | 55 |
897 MJ ha−1)64 had a more significant energy input followed by tomato (72
192 MJ ha−1),16 chili (41
552 MJ ha−1), potato (28
613 MJ ha−1)60 and eggplant (13
911 MJ ha−1).65 Eggplant with the lowest energy input had the highest output of 125
612 MJ ha−1,65 followed by cucumber (95
809 MJ ha−1),64 potato (92
296 MJ ha−1),60 tomato (18
960 MJ ha−1)16 and chili (18
699 MJ ha−1).66 Input energy was more than output energy in cucumber, tomato, and chili production; therefore, production was not profitable. Among fruit crops, the energy ratio of grapes was the highest (2.152). Cultivation of grapes59 had better prospects than that of apples, as apple growers with 42
819 MJ ha−1 of input energy could extract an output of only 49
857 MJ ha−1 leading to an energy ratio of 1.16.60
![]() | ||
| Fig. 6 (a) and (b) Global average variation in input and output energy (MJ ha−1) of horticultural crops. | ||
| Crops | Country | Input energy (MJ ha−1) | Output energy (MJ ha−1) | Net energy (MJ ha−1) | Energy ratio | Energy productivity (kg MJ−1) | Specific energy (MJ kg−1) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apple | Iran | 42 819 |
49 858 |
7039.00 | 1.16 | 0.79 | 1.26 | 59 |
| Apple | Iran | 36 135.16 |
42 278.36 |
6143.20 | 1.17 | 0.49 | 2.05 | 77 |
| Apple | Turkey | 43 404.31 |
65 508.14 |
22 103.83 |
1.51 | 0.63 | 1.59 | 78 |
| Apricot | Turkey | 22 806.2 |
45 968.1 |
23 161.9 |
2.00 | 0.56 | 2.33 | 79 |
| Banana | Turkey | 51 560.1 |
98 024.9 |
4646.8 | 1.90 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 63 |
| Cherry | Turkey | 36 231.1 |
38 001.5 |
1770.4 | 1.10 | 0.42 | 2.56 | 62 |
| Grapes | Iran | 45 213 |
218 654.00 |
174 525.70 |
4.95 | 0.42 | 2.40 | 59 |
| Kiwifruit | Iran | 33 802.8 |
45 039.9 |
11 237.1 |
1.40 | 0.71 | 1.43 | 80 |
| Lemon | Turkey | 62 977.9 |
66 500.0 |
3522.1 | 1.10 | 0.56 | 1.80 | 61 |
| Mandarin | Turkey | 63 169.7 |
58 425.0 |
−4744.7 | 1.00 | 0.51 | 2.04 | |
| Orange | Turkey | 48 886.8 |
65 668.8 |
16 782.0 |
1.40 | 0.76 | 1.40 | |
| Strawberry | Iran | 805 379.70 |
121 891.33 |
683 488.00 |
0.15 | 0.08 | 12.55 | 81 |
| Strawberry | Iran | 36 822.90 |
55 965.00 |
19 142.60 |
0.48 | 0.25 | 3.96 | 82 |
| Peach | Greece | 42 744.2 |
20 842.4 |
−21 901.9 |
0.50 | 0.26 | 3.90 | 83 |
| Pear | Iran | 172 608.43 |
88 030.30 |
84 466.30 |
0.51 | 0.27 | 3.72 | 84 |
| Watermelon | Iran | 37 103.1 |
59 231.3 |
22 128.2 |
1.60 | 1.74 | 0.69 | 85 |
| Potato | Iran | 28 613 |
92 296 |
63 683.00 |
3.22 | 0.30 | 3.20 | 60 |
| Cucumber | Iran | 148 837 |
95 809 |
53 028.00 |
0.80 | 0.80 | 1.24 | 64 |
| Eggplant | Iran | 13 911 |
125 613 |
1 11 702.00 |
9.02 | 1.53 | 0.65 | 65 |
| Tomato | Turkey | 72 192 |
18 960 |
53 232.00 |
0.25 | 0.36 | 2.81 | 16 |
| Pepper | Iran | 80 253.4 |
80 000 |
−253.4 | 1.00 | 0.80 | 1.25 | 86 |
| Garlic | Iran | 40 307.9 |
26 830.1 |
−13 477.8 |
0.70 | 0.42 | 2.40 | 20 |
| Onion | Morocco | 107 483.0 |
84 269.17 |
23 213.83 |
0.78 | 0.54 | 1.85 | 87 |
| Lettuce | Indonesia | 24 540 |
12 024 |
12 516.00 |
0.49 | 0.33 | 3.07 | 66 |
| Tomato | 47 619 |
40 476 |
7143.00 | 0.85 | 1.06 | 0.94 | 66 | |
| Chilli | 41 552 |
18 699 |
22 853.00 |
0.45 | 0.56 | 1.78 | 66 |
036.1 MJ ha−1). In the case of indirect energy, the highest value is found in leguminous crops (37
119.92 MJ ha−1), whereas oilseed crops have the lowest (10
316.06 MJ ha−1). Vegetable crops have the highest renewable energy value (21
341.2 MJ ha−1), whereas oilseed crops have the lowest value (1578.56 MJ ha−1). In the case of non-renewable energy, legumes have the highest value (213
713.84 MJ ha−1), whereas tobacco has the lowest value (16
443.3 MJ ha−1).
| Classifications | Direct energy | Indirect energy | Renewable energy | Non renewable energy | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cereals | Average | 14 169.95 |
19 097.79 |
6172.52 | 27 095.22 |
| Higher | 19 816.1 (wheat) |
28 922.1 (corn) |
9056.7 (wheat) | 95 604 (corn) |
|
| Lower | 10 765.2 (rice) |
11 462.4 (barley) |
4353.5 (barley) | 41 655.5 (wheat) |
|
| Pulses/legumes | Average | 27 042.42 |
37 119.92 |
4041 | 213 713.84 |
| Higher | 430 130(Alfalfa) |
882 641 (alfalfa) |
55 020 (alfalfa) |
452 512 (alfalfa) |
|
| Lower | 5385 (chikpea) | 28 410 (chickpea) |
954 (chickpea) | 23 025 (chickpea) |
|
| Oilseed crop | Average | 8876.24 | 10 316.06 |
1578.56 | 17 519.8 |
| Higher | 27 376.5 (soybean) |
515 208.0 (coconut) |
26 107.9 (sunflower) |
497 655.0 (coconut) |
|
| Lower | 9872.8 (sesame) | 16 437.5 (sesame) |
657.5 (sesame) | 6564.7 (sesame) | |
| Fiber/cash crop | Average | 16 918.34 |
16 229.08 |
5184.06 | 27 963.36 |
| Higher | 33 147.4 (cotton) |
66 128.8 (cotton) |
2698.3 (cotton) | 32 981.3 (cotton) |
|
| Lower | 33 147.4 (cotton) |
66 128.8 (cotton) |
2698.3 (cotton) | 32 981.3 (cotton) |
|
| Nuts | Average | 9283.6 | 12 443.4 |
3142 | 18 585.11 |
| Higher | 29 437.7 (pistachio) |
29 567.1 (walnut) |
2631.9 (walnut) | 9972.7 (walnut) | |
| Lower | 2862.6 (hazelnut) | 11 255.0 (hazelnut) |
450.2 (hazelnut) | 4922.4 (pistachio) | |
![]() |
|||||
| Horticultural crops | |||||
| Vegetables | Average | 38 951.5 |
33 318.84 |
12 341.2 |
59 929.09 |
| Higher | 126 167.3 (cucumber) |
92 822.0 (eggplant) |
84 530.3 (cucumber) |
36 525.4 (eggplant) |
|
| Lower | 24 537.0 (lettuce) |
3680.0 (lettuce) | 8000.0 (lettuce) | 58 543 (cucumber) |
|
| Fruits | Average | 19 874.2 |
21 734.5 |
9881 | 31 727.7 |
| Higher | 51 560.1 (banana) |
116 890.8 (grape) |
51 592.0 (banana) |
82 357.3 (grape) |
|
| Lower | 228.6.2 (apricot) | 15 141.4 (strawberry) |
9906.0 (grape) | 2669.7 (strawberry) | |
| Tobacco | Average | 12 036.1 |
13 487.1 |
9079.96 | 16 443.3 |
| Higher | 12 036.1 (tobacco) |
13 487.1 (tobacco) |
9079.96 (tobacco) | 16 443.3 (tobacco) |
|
| Lower | 12 036.1 (tobacco) |
13 487.1 (tobacco) |
9079.96 (tobacco) | 16 443.3 (tobacco) |
|
| Classification | Cereals | Vegetables | Fruits | Nuts | Oil crops | Leguminous crops | Fiber crops | Tobacco | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanization index | Average | 0.77 | 0.35 | 0.45 | 0.54 | 0.37 | 0.67 | 0.52 | 0.23 |
| Maximum | 0.90 (corn) | 0.55 (lettuce) | 0.80 (banana) | 0.60 (pistachio) | 0.66 (rapeseed) | 0.87 (alfalfa) | 0.52 (cotton) | 0.23 (tobacco) | |
| Minimum | 0.611 (rice) | 0.03 (watermelon) | 0.12 (strawberry) | 0.46 (hazelnut) | 0.31 (coconut) | 0.47 (chickpea) | 0.52 (cotton) | 0.23 (tobacco) | |
| Ranking | 1 | 7 | 5 | 3 | 6 | 2 | 4 | 8 | |
Agricultural operations have traditionally relied on both machinery and labour, but machinery is rapidly displacing manpower, saving time and enhancing the quality of agricultural operations. According to ref. 88, mechanical power has grown from 41.54 percent of total agricultural power to 82.85 percent, and mechanical tractive power (tractor and power tiller) has increased from 8.46 percent to 32.85 percent between 1971 and 2001.
Traditional agriculture usually requires more investment than automated agriculture. Higher land and labour productivity and applying appropriate automation technologies increase yield and lower cultivation costs. The major goal of mechanisation utilisation in a developed nation is to reduce costs or labour energy, but in a developing country, it is to increase productivity.26
• This study would provide valuable information to the farming community and policymakers on a global scale to carry out/suggest suitable variations in agricultural practices leading to significant energy management in crop production systems.
• The share of fertilizers in energy consumption was the second highest (20%) of the overall energy input. Due to the limited arable land, this was used as an alternative to attain an increased crop yield. This is in response to the increasing population and need to offer appropriate and sufficient dietary nutrition. In addition, farmers had limited knowledge of the appropriate dosage leading to excessive usage of chemical fertilizers.
• The energy input and output varied according to geographical location and type of crops. The energy input and output of major cereal crops varied between 2736.46–35
737.13 MJ ha−1 and 37
906.00–1
00
346 MJ ha−1 in wheat crops, 13
781.00–24
116.40 MJ ha−1 and 127
632.00–1
61
586 MJ ha−1 in paddy/rice and 3283.00–7000.00 MJ ha−1 and 6943–9514 MJ ha−1 in millet crops, respectively. However, energy input was more in the case of horticultural crops such as cucumber (148
837 MJ ha−1), grapes (68
928 MJ ha−1), tomato (47
619 MJ ha−1), chilli (41
552 MJ ha−1), apples (42
819 MJ ha−1), potato (28
613 MJ ha−1) and eggplant (13
911 MJ ha−1), respectively. The highest values of the energy ratio, specific energy and energy productivity were recorded as 29.4 (coconut), 26.73 MJ kg−1 (pistachios) and 6.67 kg MJ−1 (millet), while the lowest values were obtained in tobacco (0.03), sugarcane (0.32 MJ kg−1) and tobacco (0.04 kg MJ−1).
• The mechanization index level varied from the highest value of 0.90 in cereal crops to the lowest value of 0.03 in fruit crops leading to an average value of 0.52.
• Several studies have been undertaken on energy input–output analysis and their linkages, as demonstrated in prior works, focusing on fruit, cereal, and vegetable crops. However, research on energy usage in other crops, such as beverage and spice crops as well as fiber crops, is scarce. There is an urgent need to conduct such an energy-exergy analysis to determine the future actions to enhance the efficiency of agricultural production systems.
• The study of energy usage in crop production may be used to create a reliable computer aided software/programme for computing different energy efficiency measures to optimize energy usage.
000 Metric Tons), The Statistics Portal, 2019 Search PubMed.| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022 |