Title: Ag
1Co-Effects of CC and GHG Mitigation Policies
Bruce McCarl Distinguished and Regents Professor
of Agricultural Economics Texas AM University
Presented at Climate Change Segment of Advanced
Resources Class College Station, Feb 2011
2Discussion Outline
- What are Co-Effects of CC and GHG mitigation
Policies? - Do Co-Effects Matter?
- Ways to Measure and Quantify Co-Effects
- (EPIC, CENTURY, NWPCAM, Econometric techniques)
- Case Studies of Co-Effects e.g. water quality,
soil erosion, wildlife habitat, and biodiversity - Government Intervention
- Policy Design for Co-Effects
3CO-Effects of CC and GHG Mitigation Economic
Perspective
- CC resulting from an increase in atmospheric
concentrations of GHGEs is a public externality. - Externality Benefits or costs arise from an
activity which is created by a person and that
person does not take full account of the impacts
on the others. - Externality is a result of a market failure. A
market does not efficiently allocate resources
either too much or too little. - GHG mitigation policies can also cause
externalities. - Example of externalities related to CC policies
- e.g. a tax on carbon in the energy sector
- Positive Negative
- Human health improvement High energy prices
- Endangered species, etc. Unemployment, etc.
4AF Strategies for GHG Mitigation
5CO-Effects of CC Policies Economic Perspective
- Example of externalities and other effects
related to GHG mitigation policies - e.g. a tax on carbon in the agricultural and
forestry sectors - Positive Negative
- Water quality improvement High food prices
- Less erosions, etc. More pesticide use, etc.
- Many terminologies are used to describe
CO-EFFECTS which refers to effects arising from
GHG mitigation polices such as co-benefits/costs,
income distributional shifts, ancillary
benefits/costs, side-benefits, secondary
benefits/costs, cleaner water, reduced runoff,
increases across GHG accounts etc. - Few studies address these issues especially
negative co-effects e.g. use of more pesticides
or irrigation, effects on other GHGs.
6Ag CO-Effects of CC Policies Framework
Land Use Change
Direct Effects
CO-Effects
Environ Effects
Social Effects
CC Effects
Econ Effects
Water Quality
Rural Econ
Tech Progress
ETC.
Air Quality
Job Creation
Soil Quality
Bio- diversity
Public Health
??
??
??
??
Fuel Security
Life Styles
Recreational Impacts
Endangered Species
7Do Co-Effects Matter?
- Previous studies indicate that there are
significant CO-Effects associated with GHGE
mitigation, but most of the studies focus on
positive CO-Effects (co-benefits).
Figure 8.9 Summary of ancillary benefits
estimates in 1996 US/tC.
Source Climate Change 2001 Working Group III
Mitigation http//www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg
3/337.htm
8Do Co-Effects Matter?
- Inclusion of CO-Effects will affect cost of
reductions.
Carbon Tax (/TCE)
MC Externality Benefits
MC
MC Externality Costs
Tax0
Q2
Q0
Q1
Emission Reduction (tons)
Figure 2. Marginal Cost Curve for Carbon Emission
Reductions
9Do Co-Effects Matter?
- Inclusion of CO-Effects will affect cost of
abating of emissions and quantity. - At market equilibrium, society would produce Q
at P. - If there are externality benefits, society
produces too little energy - (Q lt Q1) with too high price (P gt P1).
- If there are externality costs, society produces
too much energy - (Q gt Q2) with too little price (P lt P2).
SMC MCprivate Externality Costs
MCprivate
SMB
P2
P
P1
Q2
Q1
Q
Energy
Figure 1. Social Marginal Benefit and Marginal
Cost Curve for Energy
10Do Co-Effects Matter?
- Inclusion of CO-Effects will affect overall
mitigation assessment. - The social optimal output is at the quantity
where - SOCIAL BENEFITS SOCIAL COSTS
- SOCIAL COSTS PRIVATE COST - EXTERNALITY
BENEFITS/COSTS - Problem how to get the accurate measures of
these externalities? - These externalities can over- or underestimate
social welfare gain under different mitigation
policies. - Suppose that the social costs for 2 mitigation
policies is such that - SC1 gt SC2 so society favors mitigation 2
- But the order of the private costs is reversed
- PC2 gt PC1 so private groups prefer mitigation
1 - Numerical Example
- SC1 150 , but PC1 50 Externality 100
- SC2 100 , but PC2 100 no Externality
11Co-effects of Emission Reductions by Energy Sector
- Coal use releases sulfur dioxide, particulates,
chemicals that contribute to air pollution
including ozone - 10 per ton carbon tax could result in 3 health
benefit from associated NOx reductions (Burtraw,
1999) - Approximate by using marginal costs as social
willingness to pay, 15 per ton of CO2 (EIA,
1995).
12Measure and Quantify Co-Effects
- Quantitative Indicators
- Although some Co-Effects are not monetized,
quantitative indicators are useful. - Use biophysical simulation or other air/water
quality simulation models such as EPIC, CENTURY,
SWAT, NWPCAM -
- EPIC
13Measure and Quantify Co-Effects
- Monetization
- Development of methods to quantify Co-Effects in
terms of dollar values - Econometric techniques such as non-market
valuation, ricardian model, etc. -
- Note that If a policy focuses on the
environmental quality and in doing so this
policy affects the CC, then now the CC effects
are considered Co-Effects to this policy. - For example, a policy focusing on cutting air
pollution also benefits the climate through
reduction of GHG emissions.
Would you be willing to pay __ on an annual
basis for a management program designed to
preserve endangered species XX?
14Case Studies of Co-Effects Water Quality
Ag Census NRI State Annual
Crop Acreage
Reference Pattanayak et al. 2002
Carbon Prices
Regional Crop Mix input use Env loads
Water Quality Index
NWPCAM
County Crop Mix and percent loads
ASMGHG
Regionalizing Model
EPIC Runoff Sim.
- Run ASMGHG at GHG prices of 25, and 50/tonne
CE - Link NWPCAM to ASMGHG outputs
- Run NWPCAM at elevated loadings corresponding to
2 GHG prices (25 and 50) - Estimate WQI at two levels
- Compute
15Case Studies of Co-Effects Water Quality
- Overall Results
- Economic
- Agricultural production declines (2-4) and
prices increase (3-8) - CS decreases, PS increases, Export earnings fall
(3 5). - GHG (not co-effects)
- National GHG emissions decline (89 and 156
MMTCE/yr under 25 and 50 /ton CE,
respectively). - Agriculture becomes a net sink at high GHG price.
- Low C price gt Low/no till cropland management
- High C price gt Biofuel offsets and
afforestation - Land use
- Traditionally cropped lands decline(0.1 6)
- Irrigated lands decline(3 7 )
- Afforestation increases(5 12 million acres)
16Co-Benefits Water Quality Changes due to Changes
in Cropland Management and Afforestation
Preliminary Results, at 25/tC
Source Pattanayak et al. 2002
17Case Studies of Co-Effects Water Quality
- Overall Results
- Loadings
- N and P decline at low price
- All loadings decline at high price
- Erosion reductions most dramatic
- National WQ increased nearly 2
- Future Extensions
- Co-effects
- Monetized
- Multiple co-effects biodiversity
- Omitted loadings in forestry and livestock
18Case Studies of Co-Effects Environmental benefits
Reference Plantinga and Wu 2003
Empirical Procedure
Landik fik (net return, population density,
land quality ) fik logistic function using SUR
procedure Net return to forestgt effect on the
forest but on the agriculture Net return to Ag
gt effect on the forest but on the
agriculture
Estimate Land Use
Five values of subsidies are used to achieve
conversion of 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 of the
baseline ag land. Average costs for
afforestation rise from 200 (5 conversion) to
600 per acre (25 conversion).
Get Acres of Afforested Land
Using Birdsey forest carbon function to estimate
additional C seq. through afforestation. Using
the Natural Resource Inventory (NRI) and the Soil
Interpretation Record System (SOILS5) to predict
locations, agricultural land conversion, and
environmental characteristics (e.g. soil type,
permeability).
Determine C Seq. Environ. Characteristics
Using estimation from previous studies to
quantify environmental benefits. Under 25
conversion scenario gt soil erosion benefits
32-42 of cost of Cseq. program gt
wildlife habitat benefits 25 of cost of
Cseq. program gt non-consumptive use benefits
25 of cost of Cseq. program
Estimate Environ. Benefits
19Case Studies of Co-Effects Environmental benefits
Remarks
(1). Co-Benefits appear to be substantial. Soil
erosion Wildlife habitat (Use Value) Non-Use
Value ? Cseq Cost 42 M
30 M 31 M
101-132M (under 25 conversion
scenario) (2). The number of potential
co-benefits and co-costs are not included (e.g.
water quality improvement, negative effects on
wildlife habitat). (3). Unrealistic fixed prices
assumption on timber and agricultural products
20Case Studies of Co-Effects Biodiversity
Reference Matthews, OConnor, and Plantinga 2002
- Study of land use changes impacts on biodiversity
in South Carolina, Maine, and Southern Wisconsin - Two types of land use gt agricultural and
Forestry lands - Two types of birds gt farmland and forest
birds (651 species) - Using an econometric model to estimate land use
changes due to afforestation subsidies - Achieving a 10 reduction in agricultural land by
giving afforestation subsidies as an incentive - Using an estimated land use change to estimate
bird abundance
21Negative the net Co-benefits (CB)
- Some co-effects are beneficial and can help
offset the costs of producing practices from a
social perspective - eg Improving water quality from low tillage
- eg. Enhancing producer incomes from conversion
of cropland to grasslands - The co-benefits likely to be partially offset by
co-costs - Expanded emissions in the energy sector vs. the
offsets gained from CS - Co-effect are relevant in all sectors of the
economy ? accounting needs to be evenhanded
Reference McCarl.B.A , Tanveer A. B , Man,K.
Kim, Cost of Carbon
22Examples about potential ancillary benefits or
costs
- Particle pollution ? fossil fuel use
- Recreational sites ? reforestation programs
- Technological efficiency ? new technologies and
unit costs fall - Welfare ? carbon taxation
- Road-use related mortality ? public transport
- Congestion ? public transport
- Employment ? GHG projects with excess supply of
labor - Higher electricity prices ?reductions in
electricity ? reduce educational opportunities
for children - Reduced electrification rates ? increases in
household air pollution - Costs associated with ghg projects ? decreased
economic activity ? decline in employment
23Co-effects from Agriculture and Forestry
Sequestration
- Watson 2000 co-benefits
- soil productivity could be improved through
increased capacity to retain water and nutrients - long-lived valuable products (wood) are produced
- marginal lands could be improved and riparian
ecosystems restored - Erosion reduction
- Antle 2000
- Reduced erosion, improved land quality, water
quality, recreation sites, bio-diversity, farmer
income support .
24AM Assessed in monetary terms AP Assessed in
physical terms, possibly partly in monetary
terms. NA Not assessed, they may be important.
NE No effect of significance is anticipated. 1.
SO2 and NOx include acid deposition impacts. 2.
Effects of PM10, NOx and SO2 on amenity arise
with respect to visibility. In previous studies
these have not been found to be significance in
Europe, although they are important in the US. 3.
Routine operations generate externalities through
mining accidents, transport accidents, power
generation accidents, construction and
dismantling accidents and occupation health
impacts. All these involve mortality and
morbidity effects. 4. Water pollution effects
include impacts of mining (including solid
wastes) on ground and surface water, power plant
emissions to water bodies, acid deposition and
its impacts on lakes and rivers (partly
quantified).
25Co-effects consider or not?
- Consideration could speed up implementation
- High cost of climate change mitigation might be
largely offset by ancillary benefits - Policy benefits of incorporating co-effects
- Design policy on inclusive set of effects
- Support GHG initiatives with broader
environmental co-effects (no regrets) - Justify interventions in favor of terrestrial
activities - Safely ignored
- If these effects are small relative to the
other costs or the benefits of reducing GHGs - Simplifies an already complex debate.
26Co-effects
GHGE Mitigation
Co-effects
Agricultural Involvement
Mitigation in Energy Sector
Transportation
Co-effects
Co-effects
Co-effects
27Ag vs Non Ag share of a given amount of emissions
control
CN
CA
All Non-ag
Q
All ag
CA is cost of abatement by Ag, CN is cost of
abatement by Non Ag,
28Ag vs Non Ag share of a given amount of emissions
control
CN
CA
CA
Ag cobenefits
All Non-ag
Q
Q
All ag
Ag co benefits only and ag share increases
29Ag vs Non Ag share of a given amount of emissions
control
CN
CA
CA
CN
Non Ag cobenefits
Ag cobenefits
All Non-ag
Q
Q
Q
All ag
Ag and non ag co benefits and share depends on
relative size
30Case Studies of Co-Effects Environmental benefits
Remarks
(1). Co-Benefits appear to be substantial. Soil
erosion Wildlife habitat (Use Value) Non-Use
Value ? Cseq Cost 42 M
30 M 31 M
101-132M (under 25 conversion
scenario) (2). The number of potential
co-benefits and co-costs are not included (e.g.
water quality improvement, negative effects on
wildlife habitat). (3). Unrealistic fixed prices
assumption on timber and agricultural products
31Challenge
- Complexity gt multiple co-effects, double count,
global vs. local effects, etc. - Quantifiability gt methodologies
- Policy Design
- Distributional effects gt CDM
- Uncertainty
Air Quality
CC Mitigation
Human Health
Water Quality
32Reference
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Sequestration Policies and Markets to Alleviate
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