欧洲农田的碳固存。

SEB experimental biology series Pub Date : 2005-01-01
Pete Smith, Pete Falloon
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引用次数: 0

摘要

《马拉喀什协定》允许将生物圈碳汇和碳源纳入实现《京都议定书》第一承诺期减排目标的努力中。根据《京都议定书》第3.4条,森林管理、农田管理、牧场管理和植被恢复是允许的活动。因此,土壤碳汇(和碳源)可以包括在这些活动中。据估计,农田是欧洲每年向大气中流失碳的最大生物圈来源,但在所有土地利用类型中,农田的估算是最不确定的。据估计,欧洲的农田(远至欧洲东部的乌拉尔山脉)每年损失300 Tg (C),而欧盟的平均数字估计为每年78 Tg (C)(标准差值为37)。欧盟国家的估计在每个地区的基础上也有类似的数量级。相对于目前农田土壤中储存的碳量而言,欧洲在减少农田向大气的碳通量以及农田管理隔绝土壤碳方面具有巨大潜力。欧洲(欧盟15国)农田的碳储存生物潜力约为每年90-120 Tg (C),可提供一系列选择,包括减少和免耕、预留、多年生作物、深根作物、更有效地利用有机改良剂(动物粪便、污水污泥、谷物秸秆、堆肥)、改进轮作、灌溉、生物能源作物、推广、有机农业,以及将耕地转化为草地或林地。如果只考虑对土地利用、原材料数量和可用土地的限制,封存潜力可达每年45 Tg (C)。由于社会经济和其他限制因素,实际可实现的潜力和保守可实现的潜力可能大大低于生物潜力,实际可实现的潜力估计约为生物潜力的20%。与其他固碳方案一样,非co、微量气体的潜在影响也需要考虑在内。如果要利用农田的碳固存来帮助实现《京都议定书》第一个承诺期的减排目标,土壤碳的变化必须是可测量和可核查的。在5年的承诺期内,土壤碳的变化很难测量,这对《京都议定书》的核算和核查有影响。目前,大多数国家只能希望在第一个承诺期内实现低水平的可核查性,而那些拥有最发达的国家碳核算系统的国家将能够提供中等水平的可核查性。对可核查性的非常严格的定义将需要核查,而这对任何国家来说都是极其昂贵的。欧洲的农田在减少向大气的碳通量和在土壤中固碳方面具有相当大的潜力,但土壤中的碳固碳潜力有限,而且不是永久性的。鉴于碳固存也可能难以测量和核实,土壤碳固存是比直接减少碳排放更危险的减缓气候变化的长期战略。然而,改善农业管理除了具有减缓气候变化的潜力外,往往还具有一系列其他环境和经济效益,这可能使改善土壤碳储存的尝试成为可持续性综合政策的一部分,具有吸引力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Carbon sequestration in European croplands.

The Marrakech Accords allow biospheric carbon sinks and sources to be included in attempts to meet emission reduction targets for the first commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol. Forest management, cropland management, grazing land management, and re-vegetation are allowable activities under Article 3.4 of the Kyoto Protocol. Soil carbon sinks (and sources) can, therefore, be included under these activities. Croplands are estimated to be the largest biospheric source of carbon lost to the atmosphere in Europe each year, but the cropland estimate is the most uncertain among all land-use types. It is estimated that European croplands (for Europe as far east as the Urals) lose 300 Tg (C) per year, with the mean figure for the European Union estimated to be 78 Tg (C) per year (with one SD=37). National estimates for EU countries are of a similar order of magnitude on a per-area basis. There is significant potential within Europe to decrease the flux of carbon to the atmosphere from cropland, and for cropland management to sequester soil carbon, relative to the amount of carbon stored in cropland soils at present. The biological potential for carbon storage in European (EU 15) cropland is of the order of 90-120 Tg (C) per year, with a range of options available that include reduced and zero tillage, set-aside, perennial crops, deep rooting crops, more efficient use of organic amendments (animal manure, sewage sludge, cereal straw, compost), improved rotations, irrigation, bioenergy crops, extensification, organic farming, and conversion of arable land to grassland or woodland. The sequestration potential, considering only constraints on land use, amounts of raw materials and available land, is up to 45 Tg (C) per year. The realistic potential and the conservative achievable potentials may be considerably lower than the biological potential because of socioeconomic and other constraints, with a realistically achievable potential estimated to be about 20% of the biological potential. As with other carbon sequestration options, potential impacts of non-CO, trace gases also need to be factored in. If carbon sequestration in croplands is to be used in helping to meet emission reduction targets for the first commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol, the changes in soil carbon must be measurable and verifiable. Changes in soil carbon can be difficult to measure over a 5-year commitment period, and this has implications for Kyoto accounting and verification. Currently, most countries can hope to achieve only a low level of verifiability during the first commitment period, whereas those with the best-developed national carbon accounting systems will be able to deliver an intermediate level of verifiability. Very stringent definitions of verifiability would require verification that would be prohibitively expensive for any country. There is considerable potential in European croplands to reduce carbon fluxes to the atmosphere and to sequester carbon iri the soil, but carbon sequestration in soil has a finite potential and is non-permanent. Given that carbon sequestration may also be difficult to measure and verify, soil carbon sequestration is a riskier long-term strategy for climate mitigation than direct reduction of carbon emissions. However, improved agricultural management often has a range of other environmental and economic benefits in addition to climate mitigation potential, and this may make attempts to improve soil carbon storage attractive as part of integrated sustainability policies.

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