Balancing conflicting policy goals is a key challenge in the
transition to sustainable agricultural systems. An important
example is herbicide use reduction potentially conflicting
with conservation tillage—which often strongly
relies on herbicide use. We investigate the joint uptake of
two agri-environmental schemes, conservation tillage and
herbicide-free agriculture systems. To this end, we use a
combination of detailed survey data on farmer behavior,
environmental and agronomic data, and census data on
the complete population of all farmers from Switzerland.
Findings based on a multinomial logit and fixed effects
multinomial logit indicate that, conditional on observable
factors, the systems are not complementary, but joint
adoption occurs for 35% of farmers. Behavioral factors
explain 26% of joint adoption behavior, emphasizing the
role of risk taking, openness to innovation, and biodiversity
valuations in farmers’ decisions. Our analysis provides
broader implications for assessing and navigating conflicting
sustainability goals in agriculture globally.