J. Moore, D. Manter, M. Bowman, M. Hunter, E. Bruner, S. McClelland
{"title":"A framework to estimate climate mitigation potential for US cropland using publicly available data","authors":"J. Moore, D. Manter, M. Bowman, M. Hunter, E. Bruner, S. McClelland","doi":"10.2489/jswc.2023.00132","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The US agricultural sector is proposed as one opportunity to contribute to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reductions—reductions that are needed to limit atmospheric warming to be more in line with the US Nationally Determined Contribution to the Paris Agreement. Improved management of agricultural soils can both mitigate GHG emissions and increase carbon (C) sequestration, but disagreement exists regarding what levels of adoption are possible and to what extent they may mitigate net GHG emissions. In this paper, we provide a framework for setting reasonable, short-term conservation practice adoption targets and quantifying the associated net emissions reductions. Our framework was constructed using USDA-based publicly available inventory data and mitigation potentials from the COMET-Planner tool scaled to nine farm resource regions. The framework includes 2017 levels of conservation practice adoption and two 10-year growth scenarios: business-as-usual (BAU) and accelerated adoption rates. We evaluated six cropland management practices and practices associated with Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) establishment. Based on existing (2017) census data, we estimated that 134.2 million tonnes (Mt) carbon dioxide equivalents (CO2e) per year have been or continue to be reduced through the adoption of conservation management practices on a cumulative total of 133.5 million hectares (Mha) of cropland. Under the BAU scenario, we estimated an additional 6.2 Mha y−1 of adoption could result in a reduction potential of 48.7 Mt CO2e y−1. Under the accelerated scenario, we estimated an additional 13.1 Mha y−1 of adoption could result in a reduction potential of 118.5 Mt of CO2e y−1 over the next 10 years. This framework highlights three key outcomes: (1) agriculture has had a substantial impact on GHG mitigation through existing/historical adoption of six cropland management practices and conversion of lands to the CRP; (2) these shifts in adoption provide an important baseline to make future projections of changes in practice adoption given regional trends and the resulting GHG mitigation potentials; and (3) disaggregating national estimates to the farm resource region level can help to inform and prioritize programs and policies consistent with existing climate goals. Estimates reported here reflect the current state of national modeling efforts and agricultural inventory sources. As new data such as the pending 2022 Ag Census report and model enhancements are made, the framework we outline here can be used to revise and update the estimates to improve accuracy and applicability.","PeriodicalId":50049,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Soil and Water Conservation","volume":"28 1","pages":"193 - 206"},"PeriodicalIF":2.2000,"publicationDate":"2022-12-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Soil and Water Conservation","FirstCategoryId":"97","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2489/jswc.2023.00132","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"农林科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"ECOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 3
Abstract
The US agricultural sector is proposed as one opportunity to contribute to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reductions—reductions that are needed to limit atmospheric warming to be more in line with the US Nationally Determined Contribution to the Paris Agreement. Improved management of agricultural soils can both mitigate GHG emissions and increase carbon (C) sequestration, but disagreement exists regarding what levels of adoption are possible and to what extent they may mitigate net GHG emissions. In this paper, we provide a framework for setting reasonable, short-term conservation practice adoption targets and quantifying the associated net emissions reductions. Our framework was constructed using USDA-based publicly available inventory data and mitigation potentials from the COMET-Planner tool scaled to nine farm resource regions. The framework includes 2017 levels of conservation practice adoption and two 10-year growth scenarios: business-as-usual (BAU) and accelerated adoption rates. We evaluated six cropland management practices and practices associated with Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) establishment. Based on existing (2017) census data, we estimated that 134.2 million tonnes (Mt) carbon dioxide equivalents (CO2e) per year have been or continue to be reduced through the adoption of conservation management practices on a cumulative total of 133.5 million hectares (Mha) of cropland. Under the BAU scenario, we estimated an additional 6.2 Mha y−1 of adoption could result in a reduction potential of 48.7 Mt CO2e y−1. Under the accelerated scenario, we estimated an additional 13.1 Mha y−1 of adoption could result in a reduction potential of 118.5 Mt of CO2e y−1 over the next 10 years. This framework highlights three key outcomes: (1) agriculture has had a substantial impact on GHG mitigation through existing/historical adoption of six cropland management practices and conversion of lands to the CRP; (2) these shifts in adoption provide an important baseline to make future projections of changes in practice adoption given regional trends and the resulting GHG mitigation potentials; and (3) disaggregating national estimates to the farm resource region level can help to inform and prioritize programs and policies consistent with existing climate goals. Estimates reported here reflect the current state of national modeling efforts and agricultural inventory sources. As new data such as the pending 2022 Ag Census report and model enhancements are made, the framework we outline here can be used to revise and update the estimates to improve accuracy and applicability.
美国农业部门被提议为减少温室气体(GHG)排放做出贡献的一个机会——减少温室气体排放是限制大气变暖所必需的,以更符合美国对《巴黎协定》的国家自主贡献。改善农业土壤管理既可以减少温室气体排放,又可以增加碳(C)固存,但在可能采用何种水平以及在多大程度上可以减少温室气体净排放方面存在分歧。在本文中,我们提供了一个框架,以制定合理的,短期的保护实践采用目标和量化相关的净减排。我们的框架是使用基于美国农业部的公开库存数据和COMET-Planner工具的缓解潜力构建的,该工具扩展到9个农场资源区域。该框架包括2017年的保护实践采用水平和两个10年增长情景:一切照旧(BAU)和加速采用率。我们评估了6种与保护保护区计划(CRP)建立相关的农田管理实践。根据现有的(2017年)普查数据,我们估计,通过采取保护管理措施,每年已经或继续减少1.342亿吨二氧化碳当量(CO2e),累计总数为1.335亿公顷(Mha)农田。在BAU情景下,我们估计额外的6.2 Mha / y - 1的采用可能导致4870 Mha / y - 1二氧化碳当量的减少潜力。在加速情景下,我们估计,在未来10年内,额外采用13.1 Mha y - 1可能导致减少1.185 mmt CO2e y - 1的潜力。该框架强调了三个关键成果:(1)通过现有/历史上采用的六种农田管理做法和将土地转为CRP,农业对温室气体减排产生了重大影响;(2)在考虑区域趋势和由此产生的温室气体减缓潜力的情况下,这些采用情况的变化为今后预测实践采用情况的变化提供了重要的基线;(3)将国家估计分解到农业资源区域水平,有助于为符合现有气候目标的计划和政策提供信息并确定优先次序。这里报告的估计数反映了国家建模工作和农业库存来源的现状。随着新数据(如即将发布的2022年农业人口普查报告和模型增强)的出现,我们在这里概述的框架可用于修改和更新估算,以提高准确性和适用性。
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Soil and Water Conservation (JSWC) is a multidisciplinary journal of natural resource conservation research, practice, policy, and perspectives. The journal has two sections: the A Section containing various departments and features, and the Research Section containing peer-reviewed research papers.