Title: Impacts of Agricultural Adaptation to Climate Policies
1Impacts of Agricultural Adaptation to Climate
Policies
- Uwe A. Schneider
- Research Unit Sustainability and Global Change,
Hamburg University - Contributors
- Kerstin Jantke, Ivie Ramos, Christine Schleupner,
Timm Sauer, Chris Llull (Hamburg University),
Bruce A. McCarl (Texas AM University), - Petr Havlik, Oskar Franklin, Steffen Fritz,
Michael Obersteiner (International Institute for
Applied Systems Analysis), Erwin Schmid
(University of Natural Resources and Applied Life
Sciences, Vienna), Juraj Balkovic, Rastislav
Skalsky (Soil Science and Conservation Research
institute, Bratislava), Martin Weih (Swedish
University of Agricultural Sciences ), Andre
Faaji, Edward Smeets (Utrecht University)
2- Questions Challenges
- Research Tools
- Policy Analysis
- Conclusions
3Land Use
Climate (Environment)
Policies Society
4Questions
- Mitigation Potential of Climate Policies?
- Land Management Adaptation?
- Commodity Market Impacts?
- Environmental Side Effects?
- Social Side Effects?
5Challenges
- Heterogeneity (Resources, Technologies)
- Complexity (Mitigation Options, Markets,
Externalities, Policies) - Global Scope
6 Land use competition
7Forest and Agricultural Sector Optimization Model
- FASOM
- Partial Equilibrium, Bottom-Up Model
- Maximizes sum of consumer and producer surplus
- Constrained by resource endowments, technologies,
policies - Spatially explicit, discrete dynamic
- Integrates environmental effects
- Programmed in GAMS
8FASOM History
- US (1993)
- EU (2004)
- Global (2006)
9FASOM Structure
Limits
Limits
Resources
Land Use Technologies
Products
Markets
Inputs
Demand Functions, Trade
Processing Technologies
Environmental Impacts
Supply Functions
Limits
10FASOM - Spatial Resolution
- Political regions
- Ownership (forests)
- Farm types
- Farm size
- Soil texture
- Stone content
- Altitude levels
- Slopes
- Soil state
- Many crop and tree species
- Tillage, planting irrigation, fertilization
harvest regime
11Homogeneous Response Units
- Altitude
- lt 300 m
- 300-600 m
- 600-1100 m
- gt1100 m
- Slope Class
- 0-3
- 3-6
- 6-10
- 10-15
DE11
DE12
- Texture
- Coarse
- Medium
- Medium-fine
- Fine
- Very fine
DE14
- Soil Depth
- shallow
- medium
- deep
DE13
- Stoniness
- Low content
- Medium content
- High content
12EUFASOMBiodiversityScope
69 Vertebrate Wetland Species
13Biodiversity - Spatial Resolution
14Climate Policy Analysis
15I US Agricultural Sector Results
- Mainly based on McCarl and Schneider (2001).
Greenhouse Gas Mitigation in U.S.Agriculture and
Forestry. SCIENCE 2942481-2481.
16US Agricultural Mitigation
500
450
400
350
Technical Potential
Competitive Economic Potential
300
Carbon price (Euro/tce)
250
200
150
100
50
0
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
Greenhouse Gas Emission Mitigation (mmtce)
17US Mitigation Strategy Mix
500
Afforestation Sink
400
Tillage Carbon Sink
300
Carbon price (/tce)
CH4 N2O Decrease
200
Bioenergy Emission Offsets
100
0
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
Emission reduction (mmtce)
18US Tillage Carbon Sink
500
400
Economic Potential
300
Carbon price (/tce)
Competitive Economic Potential
200
Technical Potential
100
0
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
Soil carbon sequestration (mmtce)
19US Afforestation Sink
500
400
Economic Potential
Competitive Economic Potential
300
Carbon price (/tce)
200
Technical Potential
100
0
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
Emission reduction (mmtce)
20US Bioenergy Emission Offsets
500
Economic Potential
400
Competitive Economic Potential
300
Carbon price (/tce)
200
Technical Potential
100
0
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
Emission reduction (mmtce)
21US Crop Management Impacts
115
110
Irrigation
105
Intensity (Base 100)
100
95
Tillage
90
85
Fertilization
80
75
0
100
200
300
400
500
Carbon equivalent price (/mtce)
22US Agricultural Markets
220
200
Crop prices
180
160
140
Livestock prices
Fisher index
120
Livestock production
100
80
60
Crop production
Crop exports
40
20
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
Carbon price (/tce)
23US Welfare Changes
8
6
4
Gross Producer Surplus
2
Net Producer Surplus
0
Billion
-2
Emission Payments
-4
-6
Consumer Surplus
-8
-10
0
20
40
60
80
100
Carbon price (/tce)
24US Environmental Co-Effects
100
N Subsurface Flow
90
80
N Percolation
Pollution (/acre)
70
Soil Erosion
60
50
P Loss
40
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
Carbon price (/tce)
25Emission Leakage
160
Non-Annex I crop net exports for agricultural GHG
mitigation policy in
150
140
Fishers Ideal Index
130
USA Only
120
Annex I Countries
110
100
All Countries
90
0
20
40
60
80
100
Carbon price (/tce)
26II European Agricultural Sector Results
- Unpublished simulations with EUFASOM
272010 EU Bioenergy Targets
- 21 Renewable Electricity
- 610 thousand GWh
- 300 million wet tons of biomass
- 5.75 Bio-Fuels
28Biomass Crop Share for 300 Mt Target
29Climate Mitigationvs. Biodiversity Protection
302010 EU Biodiversity Targets
- 2001 European Council committed to halt the
decline of biodiversity by 2010 in Europe - 2002 EU joined about 130 countries in agreeing
to significantly reduce the rate of biodiversity
loss by 2010 worldwide - BUT
- Biodiversity loss still accelerating
- Reservation often ad hoc and uncoordinated
- 2010 only three years away
31Habitat Needs
- Simulations with the independent 69 species based
habitat module of EUFASOM show that 10, 20, 30,
40 viable populations for each species require
22, 35, 42, and 61 million hectares,
respectively, in specific locations
32Wetland Area Share for a 40 Mha Target
33Biomass Crop Share for 300 Mt Target
34EU25 Bioenergy Potentials
600
Wetland Requirement 40 Mha
500
400
Marginal Biomass Costs in Euro/ton
300
30 Mha
200
10 Mha
100
0
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
European Biomass Production in million wet tons
35Cereal Straw Removal
3
2
1
Yields
years
0
10
20
30
40
50
percentage change
-1
-2
-3
-4
Soil Organic Carbon
-5
Unpublished EPIC Simulations by E. Schmid
36Conclusions
- Low mitigation targets, low marginal mitigation
costs, more extensive agriculture, water and soil
quality benefits - High mitigation targets, high marginal cost, more
intensive agriculture, more pressure on food and
biodiversity - Simultaneous biodiversity policies increase
agricultural mitigation cost - Integrated analysis important (climate, soil,
water, biodiversity, fuel, food) to prevent
todays solution becoming the problem of tomorrow
37Integrated Analysis in CCTAME2008-2011
38Thank you.