Abstract:
Potatoes are cultivated in conventional as well as in organic farming systems and although the production area itself is
not large as compared to other crops (e.g. 1.17 % of arable land in the Czech Republic, 2.14 % in Germany, but also
14.89 % in the Netherlands), in terms of production and subsequent food usage they belong to the most important crops
not only in Europe. Farming system, which is used for their cultivation, can be one of the main factors affecting the
production of greenhouse gases. The work is focused on monitoring and calculating the value of emissions expressed in
CO2 equivalent (CO2-eqv = 1x CO2 + 23x CH4 + 298x N2O) which is produced within the cultivation of potatoes in
conventional and organic farming system. The results show that when comparing emission load within the agricultural
production of potatoes there is an evident difference between conventional and organic farming systems, while different
values can be observed in all parameters (field emission, planting, fertilizing, agrotechnical operations, pesticides).
Although agrotechnical procedures themselves, including fertilization, are very similar in conventional and organic
farming, the emission load produced per one kilogram of conventional potatoes is 0.145 kg CO2e while the load
produced per one kilogram of ecological potatoes is for the amount of 0.126 kg CO2e by around 13 % lower.