Author
Listed:
- Stefan Josef Hörtenhuber
(Institute of Livestock Sciences, BOKU University, Gregor-Mendel-Straße 33/II, 1180 Vienna, Austria)
- Caspar Matzhold
(ZuchtData EDV-Dienstleistungen GmbH, Dresdner Straße 89, 1200 Vienna, Austria
Complexity Science Hub, Metternichgasse 8, 1030 Vienna, Austria)
- Markus Herndl
(HBLFA Raumberg-Gumpenstein, Raumberg 38, 8952 Irdning-Donnersbachtal, Austria)
- Franz Steininger
(ZuchtData EDV-Dienstleistungen GmbH, Dresdner Straße 89, 1200 Vienna, Austria)
- Kristina Linke
(ZuchtData EDV-Dienstleistungen GmbH, Dresdner Straße 89, 1200 Vienna, Austria)
- Sebastian Wieser
(HBLFA Raumberg-Gumpenstein, Raumberg 38, 8952 Irdning-Donnersbachtal, Austria)
- Christa Egger-Danner
(ZuchtData EDV-Dienstleistungen GmbH, Dresdner Straße 89, 1200 Vienna, Austria)
Abstract
The sustainable future of dairy farming will depend on how trade-offs between environmental impact, economic viability, and animal welfare are managed. Dairy production contributes significantly not only to human nutrition but also to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, ammonia release, and water pollution. Comprehensive sustainability assessments are essential for addressing these impacts, also in light of evolving regulations like the EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive. However, existing research on sustainable dairy farming and intensification often overlooks trade-offs with other ecological aspects like biodiversity, economic viability, or animal welfare. This study evaluated the sustainability performance of Austrian dairy farms using a tool called NEU.rind , which combines life cycle assessment (LCA) with other indicators. Applied to 170 dairy farms, the tool identified four sustainability clusters across the dimensions of environmental conditions, efficiency, animal health, and sustainability: (1) Alpine farms (high cow longevity, medium-to-high emissions per kg milk), (2) efficient low-input farms (low emissions, high cow longevity), (3) high-output lowland farms (high productivity, lower animal welfare), and (4) input-intensive lowland farms (high emissions, especially per hectare; inefficient use of resources). The analysis revealed fundamental trade-offs between production intensity, environmental impact, and animal welfare, particularly when comparing product-based (per kg milk) versus hectare-based indicators. Key improvement strategies include increasing the use of regional feed and pasture as well as adapting manure management. For policymakers, these findings underline the importance of site-specific sustainability assessments and the need for region-specific incentive schemes that reward both environmental efficiency and animal health performance. In this context, NEU.rind provides farm-specific recommendations with minimal data input, making sustainability assessments practical and feasible.
Suggested Citation
Stefan Josef Hörtenhuber & Caspar Matzhold & Markus Herndl & Franz Steininger & Kristina Linke & Sebastian Wieser & Christa Egger-Danner, 2025.
"Sustainability Assessment of Austrian Dairy Farms Using the Tool NEU.rind : Identifying Farm-Specific Benchmarks and Recommendations, Farm Typologies and Trade-Offs,"
Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(1), pages 1-24, December.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2025:i:1:p:303-:d:1827990
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