Title: Managing Carbon in Agriculture: The Big Picture
1Managing Carbon in Agriculture The Big Picture
- Challenges and Opportunities in Managing
Agricultural Operations for a Low-Carbon Economy - Jan Lewandrowski
- USDA Global Change
- Program Office
- July 18, 2007
- West Des Moines,
- Iowa
2Presentation at-a-glance
- Why agriculture should care about climate change
- GHG mitigation Appreciating the options in
agriculture - Frameworks for managing carbon
- Key concepts
3Why agriculture should care about climate change
- Climate change and climate variability impact
agricultural production and land use. - Crops and forests exist in an atmosphere that is
increasing in concentration of CO2. - Agriculture and forests are important sources of
GHG emissions and carbon sinks. - Agricultural and forest systems have significant
potential to address climate change with low-cost
options for reducing GHG emissions and increasing
carbon sequestration.
4Mitigation Options in Agriculture
Low-cost GHG mitigation opportunities include
- Reduce GHG emissions
- Change manure managements
- Change livestock feeds
- Reduce nitrogen fertilizer use
- Increase carbon sequestration in
- Agricultural Soils (conservation tillage)
- Afforestation/reforestation
- Forest management
- Renewable energy / energy efficiency
- Biofuels (liquid fuels, power generation from
biomass) - Wind
- Anaerobic waste digesters
5Low-cost GHG mitigation opportunities a
picture
- Assumes offsets are perfect substitutes
- Different strategies dominate at different price
levels - (Slide supplied by and used with permission of
B. McCarl)
6Mitigation Options Appreciating the potential
- 1. Reducing N20 emissions Organic and synthetic
commercial fertilizer - Eq CO2 9.23 - 9.35 mt per mt nitrogen applied
- 2. Reducing CH4 emissions Enteric fermentation
- High emissions feed mix Low
emissions feed mix - Corn silage (50 grain) Corn
silage (25 grain) - Rye grain Barley grain light
- Vetch Hay
Bahiagrass - Emissions per year
Emissions per year - Per head 0.838 mt CO2
Per head 0.720 mt CO2 -
- Reduced emissions per year Per head
0.118 mt CO2 - Per 1,000 head 118 mt CO2
7Mitigation Options Appreciating the potential
- 3. Reducing CH4 emissions Manure management
(Installing an anaerobic waste digester -
- Ex Wisconsin Dairy with 1,000 dairy cows,
500 heifers, and 500 calves - Emissions before digester installation
- System
Methane Nitrous Oxide - Anaerobic Lagoon 6,684 mt CO2
71 mt CO2 - Liquid/Slurry/Deep pit 2,211 mt CO2
71 mt CO2 - Paddock/Range/Drylot 79 mt CO2
977 mt CO2 -
- Emissions after digester installation
-
0 mt CO2 0 mt CO2
8Conceptual frameworks
- Encourage voluntary actions and markets
- This has been the approach favored to date
- Cap-and-trade systems
- Set over-all limit on emissions (could apply to
sectors, regions, country) - Issue permits equal to that emissions level and
require all emitters to have a permit for all
covered emissions - Distribute emissions permits via an allocation
rule or auction - Allow entities to trade permits - those needing
additional permits buy/ those with excess permits
sell - Government incentive payments
- Government sets an emissions reduction target and
offers entities carbon payments to meet it
higher targets require higher payments - Conceptually similar to USDAs conservation
programs - Regulatory approaches
- Require entities to meet emissions reductions
targets - Example mandating fuel efficiency standards
- Generally the most difficult to accomplish
politically -
9USDAs conservation and energy programs
- Conservation Reserve Program
- Enrollment criteria (EBI) rewards bids with
carbon benefits - Continuous sign-up provision includes program to
afforest 500,000 acres of bottomland hardwood - Environment Quality Incentives Program
- Field staff directed to consider carbon benefits
in enrollment - Anaerobic digesters added to approved
conservation practices - Farmers can get paid for adopting nutrient
management systems - 9006 Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency
Program - Awards competitive grants, loans, and loan
guarantees to farmers, ranchers and small
business owners to install renewable energy
systems and improve energy efficiency - 2004 awards included
- 21 million in grants for 37 digesters, 37 wind
power projects, and 20 other renewable energy
systems - 1.8 million in energy efficiency grants to 48
individuals/small businesses.
10Legislation proposed in the 110th Congress
- Senate
- S. 1766 (Bingaman / Specter)
- S. 280 (Lieberman / McCain)
- S. 309 (Sanders / Boxer)
- S. 317 (Feinstein / Carper)
- S. 485 (Kerry / Snowe)
- House
- HR. 620 (Oliver / Gilchrest)
- HR. 1590 (Waxman)
- Depending on the Bill - provisions include
setting emissions limits, implementing
cap-and-trade systems, allowing for offsets from
agriculture and forestry, and increasing biomass
energy.
11Private, State, and regional activities.
- Private markets Chicago Climate Exchange
- Presently the only formal carbon market in the
U.S. - Voluntary to join but legally binding for members
- State California Global Warming Solutions Act of
2006 - Set statewide GHG emissions cap for 2020, based
on 1990 emissions by January 1, 2008. - Adopt mandatory reporting rules for significant
GHG sources by January 1, 2009. - Adopt a plan by January 1, 2009 indicating how
emission reductions will be achieved via
regulations, market mechanisms and other actions. - Adopt regulations by January 1, 2011 to achieve
the maximum technologically feasible and
cost-effective GHG reductions, including
provisions for using both market and alternative
compliance mechanisms. - Prior to implementation, requires evaluation of
impacts on California's economy, the environment
and public health equity
12Private, State, and regional activities.
- Region Regional GHG Initiative (10 Northest and
Mid-Atlantic states) - Starting in January 2009, limits emissions from
coal-fired, oil-fired, and gas-fired power plants
at 121 million tons annually - Limit will be implemented via a cap-and-trade
system - System explicitly allows for emissions offsets
from reforestation and methane capture for
farming facilities.
13Key concepts
- Offsets
- Associated with, but are outside of, cap-and
trade systems - Allows covered entities to meet some of their
system obligations with emissions reductions
and/or carbon sequestration obtained from
entities outside the system - Allows entities outside of system to participate
- Lowers the cost to those inside
- Measurement
- You cannot trade what you cannot quantify
- Approaches direct, models, engineering
approaches - Approaches typically trade-off accuracy and cost
- Related issues include verification, uncertainty,
and bias
14Key concepts
- Permanence To mitigate GHG emissions, carbon
sequestered in terrestrial systems must remain
out of the atmosphere. - Carbon in terrestrial systems can be released
through natural and human driven processes. - Allowing carbon sequestration in a GHG mitigation
program requires accounting for the
possibility/inevitability that the carbon will be
emitted at some point in the future - Solutions include banking credits, discounting
relative to emissions reductions, annual rental
payments, insurance policies against future
releases. - Additionality Are responses to a policy the
result of that policy or would they have happened
without it? - Want to motivate new actions that contribute
toward GHG mitigation. - Do not want to penalize early actions.
- Want to avoid moral hazard.
- Can be difficult to assess what would have
happened in a situation that did not happen.
15Thank youJan LewandrowskiUSDA Global Change
Program Office