Sustainability in agriculture and horticulture is best understood through the triple bottom line (TBL) framework, also known as the three pillars of sustainability. This model recognises that a truly sustainable business must perform well across three dimensions simultaneously: environmental, economic and social (sometimes written as Planet, Profit, People).
KEY TAKEAWAY: Sustainable agricultural business practices balance environmental stewardship, economic viability and social wellbeing. A business that profits at the expense of the environment or its workers is not genuinely sustainable.
Environmental sustainability means operating in ways that maintain the productive capacity of natural resources — soil, water, air and biodiversity — for current and future use.
Key principles:
- Protecting soil health through reduced tillage, cover crops, organic matter management
- Minimising chemical inputs to reduce pollution and ecological impact
- Conserving water through efficient irrigation and water harvesting
- Protecting native vegetation and biodiversity on and around the farm
- Reducing greenhouse gas emissions (from livestock, machinery, synthetic fertilisers)
- Managing waste streams responsibly
Business relevance: Environmental sustainability protects the long-term productive capacity of the land — the fundamental asset on which the business depends. It also increasingly influences market access and regulatory compliance.
Economic sustainability means operating a financially viable business that can continue indefinitely without depending on unsustainable levels of debt, subsidy or resource depletion.
Key principles:
- Generating sufficient income to cover costs, service debt and provide a living wage
- Managing financial risk through diversification, insurance and forward contracting
- Investing in infrastructure and technology that improves long-term productivity
- Avoiding practices that generate short-term profit at the expense of long-term productive capacity (e.g. soil mining)
- Benchmarking against industry financial KPIs (return on assets, cost of production per unit)
Business relevance: Economic viability is a prerequisite for any other form of sustainability — a business that is not financially viable cannot continue to operate or invest in environmental improvements.
EXAM TIP: When evaluating business sustainability, use specific language: economic viability, environmental integrity, and social equity. VCAA rewards precise vocabulary.
Social sustainability means operating in ways that support the wellbeing of workers, local communities and broader society.
Key principles:
- Safe work practices: Compliance with OHS legislation; zero-harm culture
- Fair wages and working conditions: Paying at least award wages; appropriate facilities for seasonal workers
- Community engagement: Contributing to rural and regional community health and employment
- Food security: Contributing to reliable, affordable, nutritious food supply for society
- Transparency and traceability: Enabling consumers and regulators to understand how food is produced
Regulatory context: The Occupational Health and Safety Act 2004 (Vic) places legal obligations on employers to identify and control workplace hazards. Non-compliance is both a social and legal failure.
Ethics in agricultural and horticultural business extends beyond compliance with law to questions of what is right and responsible practice.
COMMON MISTAKE: Students sometimes treat ethics and law as the same thing. Legal compliance is the minimum standard; ethical practice often exceeds legal requirements and is driven by values, consumer expectations and industry norms.
| Decision | Environmental | Economic | Social |
|---|---|---|---|
| Switch to drip irrigation | Reduces water use, less runoff (+) | High capital cost (-), lower long-term water bills (+) | Local employment for installation (+) |
| Adopt GM herbicide-tolerant crop | Reduced tillage (+), potential gene flow risk (-) | Lower weed control costs (+), premium market access lost (-) | Community debate (-) |
| Source seasonal backpackers via approved scheme | — | Lower labour cost (+) | Fair wages and conditions (+) |
STUDY HINT: The TBL framework is versatile — it can be applied to virtually any agricultural or horticultural business decision. Practise applying it to case studies encountered in class and from current industry news.
VCAA FOCUS: VCAA expects students to evaluate business practices using TBL/sustainability dimensions — this means identifying trade-offs, acknowledging complexity, and reaching a reasoned judgement rather than treating sustainability as black-and-white.