Visioner för fossilfria lantbruk och livsmedelssystem i Sverige - ett lantbrukarperspektiv
(2026)- Abstract
- What are the main challenges for fossil-free agriculture and food systems, according to Swedish farmers? And what do farmers think fossil-free farms should look like, and how should they function? What actions are needed from different actors to achieve these visions by 2050? These questions were discussed during a lunch-to-lunch workshop in Eskilstuna, 13-14 November 2025. The purpose of the workshop was to develop future visions for fossil-free farms and agricultural systems from a farmer’ perspective. The workshop gathered 29 farmers with different production orientations, methods and farm sizes and resulted in five future visions. The visions built to a large extent on cooperation and circularity. Circularity was expressed as... (More)
- What are the main challenges for fossil-free agriculture and food systems, according to Swedish farmers? And what do farmers think fossil-free farms should look like, and how should they function? What actions are needed from different actors to achieve these visions by 2050? These questions were discussed during a lunch-to-lunch workshop in Eskilstuna, 13-14 November 2025. The purpose of the workshop was to develop future visions for fossil-free farms and agricultural systems from a farmer’ perspective. The workshop gathered 29 farmers with different production orientations, methods and farm sizes and resulted in five future visions. The visions built to a large extent on cooperation and circularity. Circularity was expressed as cooperation between farms and other food system actors to, for example, develop local energy hubs, share machinery, and shorten value chains with fewer middlemen to increase profitability for the farmers. Soil health and photosynthesis were central in future visions, for example through integration of animals and crop cultivation in the landscape. However, the visions differed regarding the role of technology for achieving fossil-freeness on farms. Some visions highlighted precision farming and smart technology as a way to optimize and minimize the use of fossil-based inputs. Others were more critical to the role of technology in the transition and highlighted that a change of machinery also requires fossil resources. Instead, they described a fossil-free future based on societal value changes rather than technological solutions. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/b8432b0c-3fe1-45d1-bc62-299afce4b29a
- author
- Johansson, Emma
LU
; Krusberg, Tilde
LU
; Brogaard, Sara
LU
and Busch, Henner
LU
- illustrator
- Öberg, Åsa
- organization
-
- LUCSUS (Lund University Centre for Sustainability Studies)
- LTH Profile Area: The Energy Transition
- BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate
- LU Profile Area: Nature-based future solutions
- Centre for Advanced Middle Eastern Studies (CMES)
- MECW: The Middle East in the Contemporary World
- alternative title
- Visions for fossil-free farm and food systems in Sweden – a farmer’s perspective
- publishing date
- 2026-02
- type
- Book/Report
- publication status
- published
- subject
- categories
- Popular Science
- pages
- 27 pages
- publisher
- Rise, Research Institute of Sweden
- language
- Swedish
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- b8432b0c-3fe1-45d1-bc62-299afce4b29a
- date added to LUP
- 2026-03-23 10:37:21
- date last changed
- 2026-03-23 11:32:26
@techreport{b8432b0c-3fe1-45d1-bc62-299afce4b29a,
abstract = {{What are the main challenges for fossil-free agriculture and food systems, according to Swedish farmers? And what do farmers think fossil-free farms should look like, and how should they function? What actions are needed from different actors to achieve these visions by 2050? These questions were discussed during a lunch-to-lunch workshop in Eskilstuna, 13-14 November 2025. The purpose of the workshop was to develop future visions for fossil-free farms and agricultural systems from a farmer’ perspective. The workshop gathered 29 farmers with different production orientations, methods and farm sizes and resulted in five future visions. The visions built to a large extent on cooperation and circularity. Circularity was expressed as cooperation between farms and other food system actors to, for example, develop local energy hubs, share machinery, and shorten value chains with fewer middlemen to increase profitability for the farmers. Soil health and photosynthesis were central in future visions, for example through integration of animals and crop cultivation in the landscape. However, the visions differed regarding the role of technology for achieving fossil-freeness on farms. Some visions highlighted precision farming and smart technology as a way to optimize and minimize the use of fossil-based inputs. Others were more critical to the role of technology in the transition and highlighted that a change of machinery also requires fossil resources. Instead, they described a fossil-free future based on societal value changes rather than technological solutions.}},
author = {{Johansson, Emma and Krusberg, Tilde and Brogaard, Sara and Busch, Henner and Öberg, Åsa}},
institution = {{Rise, Research Institute of Sweden}},
language = {{swe}},
title = {{Visioner för fossilfria lantbruk och livsmedelssystem i Sverige - ett lantbrukarperspektiv}},
url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/245584355/Visioner_fo_r_fossilfria_lantbruk_och_livsmedelssystem_2026.pdf}},
year = {{2026}},
}