The business case for carbon farming in the USA

IF 3.9 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Alejandro Plastina, Haeun Jo, Oranuch Wongpiyabovorn
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

U.S. agricultural producers are increasingly able to participate in private voluntary carbon initiatives that compensate their efforts to sequester CO2, reduce GHG emissions, and provide ecosystem services through eligible conservation practices. This study examines the potential effects of alternative private payment regimes (per practice vs. per output), prices paid to farmers relative to out-of-pocket costs (low vs. high), and the availability of information on CO2 sequestration (limited vs. full), on the adoption of cover crops and no-till in the United States, the resulting CO2 sequestration, and changes in farmers’ net returns. The analysis relies on a highly stylized model of heterogeneous farms calibrated with county-level agronomic data, and simulated for current estimates of GHG impacts of cover crop planting and no-till under different scenarios. Our results indicate that agricultural carbon markets can be profitable for U.S. farmers, although with substantial geographic variability, and that annual carbon sequestration could range between 17 and 75 million mtCO2e. Payments per output would incentivize higher carbon sequestration than payments per practice, but the former regime would be less favored by farmers as a unified group than the latter (due to lower aggregate net returns). However, if operators of farms with high carbon sequestration potential could decide the payment regime to be implemented, they would choose the payment per output regime (due to higher net returns per enrolled hectare). Total projected net changes in GHGs under payments per practice, based solely on county-average net GHG effects of cover crops and no-till, over-estimate actual total GHG sequestration (based on the entire distribution of net effects by county) by 2.1 and 14.2 million mtCO2e, or 18% and 21%, respectively.

美国碳农业的商业案例。
美国农业生产者越来越多地参与到私人自愿碳计划中,通过符合条件的保护措施,补偿他们为封存二氧化碳、减少温室气体排放和提供生态系统服务所做的努力。本研究探讨了替代性私人支付制度(按实践与按产出)、支付给农民的价格与实付成本的关系(低与高)以及二氧化碳封存信息的可获得性(有限与全面)对美国采用覆盖作物和免耕、由此产生的二氧化碳封存以及农民净收益变化的潜在影响。该分析依赖于一个高度风格化的异质农场模型,该模型利用县级农艺数据进行校准,并模拟了不同情景下覆盖作物种植和免耕对温室气体影响的当前估计值。我们的研究结果表明,农业碳市场对美国农民来说是有利可图的,尽管存在很大的地域差异,而且每年的碳螯合量可能在 1700 万至 7500 万吨 CO2e 之间。按产出付费比按实践付费能激励更高的固碳量,但作为一个统一的群体,前者比后者更不受农民的青睐(因为总的净收益较低)。然而,如果具有高碳固存潜力的农场经营者可以决定实施哪种付款制度,他们会选择按产出付款制度(因为每公顷注册土地的净收益更高)。仅根据覆盖作物和免耕的县平均温室气体净效应,按实践付费下的温室气体预计净变化总量分别高估了实际温室气体螯合总量(基于各县净效应的整体分布)210 万吨 CO2e 和 1420 万吨 CO2e,或 18% 和 21%。
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来源期刊
Carbon Balance and Management
Carbon Balance and Management Environmental Science-Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Carbon Balance and Management is an open access, peer-reviewed online journal that encompasses all aspects of research aimed at developing a comprehensive policy relevant to the understanding of the global carbon cycle. The global carbon cycle involves important couplings between climate, atmospheric CO2 and the terrestrial and oceanic biospheres. The current transformation of the carbon cycle due to changes in climate and atmospheric composition is widely recognized as potentially dangerous for the biosphere and for the well-being of humankind, and therefore monitoring, understanding and predicting the evolution of the carbon cycle in the context of the whole biosphere (both terrestrial and marine) is a challenge to the scientific community. This demands interdisciplinary research and new approaches for studying geographical and temporal distributions of carbon pools and fluxes, control and feedback mechanisms of the carbon-climate system, points of intervention and windows of opportunity for managing the carbon-climate-human system. Carbon Balance and Management is a medium for researchers in the field to convey the results of their research across disciplinary boundaries. Through this dissemination of research, the journal aims to support the work of the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) and to provide governmental and non-governmental organizations with instantaneous access to continually emerging knowledge, including paradigm shifts and consensual views.
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