1. Greenhouse gas mitigation in agriculture.
- Author
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Pete Smith, Daniel Martino, Zucong Cai, Daniel Gwary, Henry Janzen, Pushpam Kumar, Bruce McCarl, Stephen Ogle, Frank O'Mara, Charles Rice, Bob Scholes, Oleg Sirotenko, Mark Howden, Tim McAllister, Genxing Pan, Vladimir Romanenkov, Uwe Schneider, Sirintornthep Towprayoon, Martin Wattenbach, and Jo Smith
- Subjects
GREENHOUSE gas mitigation ,AGRICULTURE ,POLLUTION prevention ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection - Abstract
Agricultural lands occupy 37% of the earth's land surface. Agriculture accounts for 52 and 84% of global anthropogenic methane and nitrous oxide emissions. Agricultural soils may also act as a sink or source for CO2, but the net flux is small. Many agricultural practices can potentially mitigate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, the most prominent of which are improved cropland and grazing land management and restoration of degraded lands and cultivated organic soils. Lower, but still significant mitigation potential is provided by water and rice management, set-aside, land use change and agroforestry, livestock management and manure management. The global technical mitigation potential from agriculture (excluding fossil fuel offsets from biomass) by 2030, considering all gases, is estimated to be approximately 5500â6000Mt CO2-eq.yrâ1, with economic potentials of approximately 1500â1600, 2500â2700 and 4000â4300Mt CO2-eq.yrâ1 at carbon prices of up to 20, up to 50 and up to 100 US$ t CO2-eq.â1, respectively. In addition, GHG emissions could be reduced by substitution of fossil fuels for energy production by agricultural feedstocks (e.g. crop residues, dung and dedicated energy crops). The economic mitigation potential of biomass energy from agriculture is estimated to be 640, 2240 and 16 000Mt CO2-eq.yrâ1 at 0â20, 0â50 and 0â100 US$ t CO2-eq.â1, respectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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