Transitioning towards more circular farming systems, which prioritise using renewable and recycled resources to reduce reliance on external inputs, offers potential to improve nutrient cycling, enhance farm profitability and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. However, widespread adoption remains limited. To support the wider adoption of circular farming practices across diverse rural and agroecological settings, we examined how psychological, contextual and motivational factors shape farmers’ sentiment and decision-making. A mixed-methods approach—combining sentiment and thematic analysis—was applied to interviews and focus groups with 96 farmers and industry stakeholders across Italy, Norway and the UK. Sentiment towards circular farming practices varied across national contexts, with UK farmers expressing more positive views overall than Norwegian farmers, and Italian farmers positioned in between. These differences reflected how well practices aligned with existing knowledge, values and farming systems, while negative sentiment was primarily associated with policy impracticalities, investment costs and local constraints, highlighting key political and structural barriers to adoption. The findings underscore the need to align circular strategies with local contexts. To support wider adoption, we recommend (1) enhancing psychological capability (e.g. aligning practices with farmers’ knowledge): through a flexible ‘toolbox’ of practices; (2) addressing physical opportunity barriers via co-designed, locally-adapted policies; and (3) strengthening reflective motivation by communicating and deliberating the broader co-benefits of circular practices. These informed insights provide more effective and inclusive strategies for sustainable agriculture and rural development across Europe.

Exploring farmer sentiment and decision-making on circular agricultural practices adoption in Europe: Evidence from Italy, Norway and the UK / F. Evans, J. Gibbons, L. Bava, D. Chadwick, S. Colombini, V. Kvakkestad, L. Lamprinakis, V. Lind, M. Pavesi, P. Williams, S. Wynne-Jones. - In: JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES. - ISSN 0743-0167. - 123:(2026 Mar), pp. 104050.1-104050.14. [10.1016/j.jrurstud.2026.104050]

Exploring farmer sentiment and decision-making on circular agricultural practices adoption in Europe: Evidence from Italy, Norway and the UK

L. Bava;S. Colombini;M. Pavesi;
2026

Abstract

Transitioning towards more circular farming systems, which prioritise using renewable and recycled resources to reduce reliance on external inputs, offers potential to improve nutrient cycling, enhance farm profitability and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. However, widespread adoption remains limited. To support the wider adoption of circular farming practices across diverse rural and agroecological settings, we examined how psychological, contextual and motivational factors shape farmers’ sentiment and decision-making. A mixed-methods approach—combining sentiment and thematic analysis—was applied to interviews and focus groups with 96 farmers and industry stakeholders across Italy, Norway and the UK. Sentiment towards circular farming practices varied across national contexts, with UK farmers expressing more positive views overall than Norwegian farmers, and Italian farmers positioned in between. These differences reflected how well practices aligned with existing knowledge, values and farming systems, while negative sentiment was primarily associated with policy impracticalities, investment costs and local constraints, highlighting key political and structural barriers to adoption. The findings underscore the need to align circular strategies with local contexts. To support wider adoption, we recommend (1) enhancing psychological capability (e.g. aligning practices with farmers’ knowledge): through a flexible ‘toolbox’ of practices; (2) addressing physical opportunity barriers via co-designed, locally-adapted policies; and (3) strengthening reflective motivation by communicating and deliberating the broader co-benefits of circular practices. These informed insights provide more effective and inclusive strategies for sustainable agriculture and rural development across Europe.
Agricultural policy; Behaviour change; Circular economy; Climate-smart agriculture; COM-B model; Sentiment analysis;
Settore AGRI-09/B - Nutrizione e alimentazione animale
Settore AGRI-09/C - Zootecnia speciale
   ERA-NET Cofund on Sustainable Crop Production
   SusCrop
   European Commission
   Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
   771134

   ERA-NET Cofund on ICT-enabled agri-food systems
   ICT-AGRI-FOOD
   European Commission
   Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
   862665

   European Research Area on Sustainable Animal Production Systems
   SusAn
   European Commission
   Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
   696231
mar-2026
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