Title: Climate Change Mitigation through Technology Innovations in Agriculture
1Climate Change Mitigation through Technology
Innovations in Agriculture
- Bettina Hedden-Dunkhorst
- and Paul Vlek
- Center for Development Research,
- University of Bonn
2Outline
- 1 Background
- 2 Technology Development in Agriculture
- 3 New Technologies for Climate Change
Mitigation - 4 Adoption Constraints
- 5 Suggestions for Policies and Instruments
3Background
- Agriculture causes about 25 global
anthropogenic CO2 emissions, 65 of CH4, and 90
of N2O emissions. - GWP CH4, 21times higher than CO2 N2O 310
times higher - Largest source of emissions transformation of
forest to agricultural land - But, agriculture is also affected by climate
change - through increased climate variability
- (Modest) mitigation options are available that
could result in win-win solutions - Productivity increases are necessary to guarantee
adoption
4Technology Development in Agriculture
- Research
- Scale
- International (16 IARCs - CGIAR)
- National (NARS)
- Local (NGOs, local knowledge)
- Policy directions for research
- Economic policies
- Trade export crops
- Social policies
- Appropriate technologies, low input technologies
- Environmental policies
- Reduced GHG emissions, anti soil erosion
technologies, water saving technologies
5- Focus of Research
- still top down
- but more focus on participatory approaches
- Capacity for Manufacturing or Multiplication of
Technology - Examples
- Mulching machine (Eastern Amazon Region)
- Seed multiplication (Zimbabwe)
6New Agricultural Technologies for Climate Change
Mitigation - Rice-Wheat Systems
- 24-27 million ha in South and East Asia
- Rice flooded fields Wheat well-drained soils
- Rice
- Emissions
- methane and nitrous oxide
- (carbon dioxide straw burning)
- Mitigation strategies
- proper management of organic inputs
- temporary (mid-season) field drainage
- direct seeding (-18 CH4)
7- Wheat
- Emissions nitrous oxide (emitted after
fertilization, irrigation and heavy rains or
during fallow periods) - Mitigation strategies
- Emissions less sensitive to
- management practices
- Problem
- Antagonism between methane and nitrous oxide
emissions, hence targeting one gas alone is
inappropriate.
8New Agricultural Technologies for Climate Change
Mitigation - Pastoral Ecosystems of the Tropics
- Worldwide grazing land covers ¼ of earths land
surface - twice the area under crops - Savannas greatest storage capacity for
belowground carbon - Soil carbon losses through land conversion
(pasture crop land) grazing management - Methane emission derive from grazing animals
- Nitrous oxide emissions (low in developing
countries) fertilizer use, land conversion,
manure application
9- Pastoral lands will lose above and belowground C
when they become drier due to climate change. - Mitigating strategies - Carbon dioxide
- Improved grazing management (0.5 t C ha-1)
- Reduction in grazing intensity
- and biomass burning
- Improvement of degraded land
- Reduction of soil erosion
- Changes in species mix to deep-root grasses
- (Substitution of renewable biological products
for fossil fuels commercial ranches LA)
10- Implementation Requirements
- Policies
- Government regulations, taxes, subsidies
- Incentives for Carbon market development
- Strengthen institutional linkages between
countries selling/buying - Strengthen pastoral networks of communication
- Information through extension services
- Functioning and accountable community governance
structures - Monitoring systems for carbon stocks
11New Agricultural Technologies for Climate Change
Mitigation - Other Systems
- Alternatives to Slash and Burn
- Managed forests
- Agroforestry
- Wheat, Maize, Soybean, etc.
- No-tillage (accumulation of soil Carbon, less
fossil fuel use) - Reduced N fertilization
12Adoption Constraints Farmers Perspective
- Lack of
- Information
- Capital
- Transportation
- Incentives (low potential to increased returns)
- Temporary land tenure and water rights
- Unreliable supplies
- Risk aversion and vulnerability of farmers
13Suggestions for Policies and Instruments
Policies
Instruments
Payments for environmental services, provide
market opportunities
Rural poverty reduction
Media support, free education
Information and Education
Legal instruments contract enforcement
Property rights
Participation in policy design, subsidiarity,
decentralisation
Policy coordination and linking by
sector (environmental, agricultural) and level
(national, local)
14Policies
Instruments
Targeted funding
Research
- Enabling environment
- patents,
- technology advice
Technology exchange
Generation of data base and dissemination of
findings
Information
Enabling environment WTO negotiations,
labeling (climate change mitigation)
Trade
15On Balance
- Agricultural technologies for modest climate
change mitigation exist. - More needs to be known about their effects and
interactions (all GHG) under different
conditions. - Mechanisms to support technology adoption need to
be developed.