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© Mark Godfrey What’s in it for agriculture and forests? Bill Stanley, The Nature Conservancy
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Will farmers and foresters benefit? “Our analysis demonstrates that the economic opportunities for farmers and ranchers can potentially outpace - perhaps significantly - the costs from climate legislation.” - USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack, July 22, 2009
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How might landowners benefit? -New biofuel or wind power markets -Financial incentives for renewable energy and agricultural emissions reductions ( $75 million to $100 million annually from 2012-2016). -Offsets (about $1 billion per year in 2015-20 to almost $15-20 billion in 2040-50 gross revenue).
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http://www.treehugger.com/carbon-offsets-suzuki.jpg The offset concept
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Offsets in Cap-and-Trade EPA (prints allowances equal to cap) Allowances to emit CO2 Offsets = Additional Allowances ©Scott Warren
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Why offsets are popular -Helps to keep costs down -Builds political support by expanding beneficiaries -Can provide benefits beyond carbon, such as water quality and habitat
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Some potential land-based offset activities -Improved forest management -Afforestation (tree planting on crop or grazing land) -Conservation tillage or other soil carbon management -Methane management from cattle lots
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A TNC Ohio Project Example: Afforestation at the Edge of Appalachia - 500 acres - 75,000 tons of CO2
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Likely sources of offsets in the U.S.
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Will this promise be delivered? -USDA tasked with identifying eligible land-based activities. -the offsets must come from “additional” projects that would no have occurred without the additional incentive an offset credit creates -Offsets must be quantifiable, verifiable, transparent and enforceable. -Must be “permanent” or at least very long term. Farmers may need to make commitments for up to 100 years, or buy replacement credits.
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Summary -Offsets are important to getting political support, and lowering costs of cap-and-trade. -They offer potentially huge economic opportunities for farmers and other landowners. -Land-based activities can also help us to protect water quality and habitat. -However, offsets must meet rigorous standards and require commitments that may not be acceptable to many landowners.
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© Mark Godfrey Lucy Miller-TNC Thank you. Bill Stanley The Nature Conservancy bstanley@tnc.org
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