Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Annual Meeting 2010 Istanbul, 21-22 April Round Table Can agricultural investment coexist with climate change policies? Soil carbon sequestration Martial.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Annual Meeting 2010 Istanbul, 21-22 April Round Table Can agricultural investment coexist with climate change policies? Soil carbon sequestration Martial."— Presentation transcript:

1 Annual Meeting 2010 Istanbul, 21-22 April Round Table Can agricultural investment coexist with climate change policies? Soil carbon sequestration Martial Bernoux April 22, 2010 Functionnal Ecology & Biogeochemistry of Soils & Agro-ecosystems

2 Background Agriculture and Forestry are key sectors of Climate Change presenting a dual aspect. Responsible for ~ 1/3 of total direct GHG emissions …But with an important mitigation potential Global mitigation potential by 2030 (from Smith et al., 2007) About 89 per cent of this potential can be achieved by soil C sequestration through cropland management, grazing land management, restoration of organic soils and degraded lands, bioenergy and water management* Mt CO 2 equivalent per year * From UNFCCC Technical paper: Challenges and opportunities for mitigation in the agricultural sector, 2008

3 Background Agriculture and Forestry are key sectors of Climate Change concerns presenting a dual aspect. Responsible for ~ 1/3 of total direct GHG emissions …But with an important mitigation potential Global mitigation potential by 2030 (from Smith et al., 2007) Mt CO 2 equivalent per year EastAgri countries represent mitigation potential of at least ~800 MtCO 2 -eq / year (i.e. ~14% of global potential) Global mitigation potential for each region by 2030 (Extract from Smith et al., 2007)

4 Part of this potential is attainable at “low” or even negative cost Background Agriculture and Forestry are key sectors of Climate Change concerns presenting a dual aspect. …But with an important mitigation potential

5 Background Agriculture and Forestry are key sectors of Climate Change concerns presenting a dual aspect. …But with an important mitigation potential Currently this potential is mainly developed in the forestry sector for several reasons but mainly: - Easy and low cost to monitor - Under the Kyoto Protocol: only afforestation/reforestation projects are eligible under the Clean Development Mechanism However, mitigation potential of agricultural soils is gaining acceptance and projects are being developed worldwide -Under voluntary markets such as the BioCarbon fund, the CCX… -Canada, Portugal, Spain and Denmark already elected cropland activities to officially account for soil C sequestration under the KP -Discussions in the climate negotiations on REDD plus -Development of tools for ex-ante appraisal of C-Balance (FAO, GEF…) -Development of analytical solution for field C determination

6 How Soil Carbon sequestration Works C inputs through root system C inputs through residues decomposition C stock is the result of the balance of: Inputs Output (mineralization) It is thus necessary to implement best management practices that would increase the inputs or/and decrease the outputs in order to promote soil C sequestration

7 Example of soil management practices which increase soil carbon Suppression of the burning (harvest residues…) Improve soil fertility and plant biomass production Improve management: Reduce/no tillage and/or cover crop/mulch

8 Soil carbon mineralization Decrease soil carbon stock Increase soil carbon stock Residues Conservation agriculture definition (FAO): 1.Minimal Soil Disturbance: the disturbed area must be less than 15 cm wide or 25% of the cropped area (whichever is lower). No periodic tillage that disturbs a greater area then the aforementioned limits. 2.Soil cover: Ground cover must be more than 30% 3.Crop rotation: Rotation should involve at least 3 different crops. However, monocropping is not an exclusion factor Conservation Agriculture

9 Soil Carbon Conventional Agriculture Conservation Agriculture Soil C accumulation Conservation agriculture and Soil C sequestration Impact of adoption of conservation agriculture on soil carbon stocks CA also promotes economy of fossil fuel consumption (permanent benefit)

10 USA 26.6 Canada 13.5 Australia 12.0 Europe 1.1 Brazil 25.5 Total World: ~110 Million ha CA/No-tillage in the world in 2007/08 (million ha) Argentina 19.7 Paraguay 2.4 Other South America 2.0 Africa 0.4 Asia 2.5 Statistics from Derpsch and Friedrich, 2009 Russia 2.0 * *Roberts and Johnston, 2009 Adoption of Conservation Agriculture

11 CA official number for France: 150 000 ha (2003-2007) from FAO-CA site Different forms of “no-tillage” Conservation Agriculture: a challenging definition Statistics are dependent of definition used: example from France France published in 2007 a review of “non-inversion tillage methods” Those techniques were used on a third (4.6 Mha) of the total arable area in 2005 They are being implemented throughout France, regardless of crop and soil type Common (bread) wheat (Triticum aestivum) Durum wheat (Triticum durum) % of plots with no-till

12 Lal et al., 1995 tCO 2 -eq ha -1 yr -1 - Semi-arid and subtropical: 0.15-0.7 - Temperate: 0.35-1.8 Six et al., 2002 - Temperate and some Tropical (0-30 cm): 1.1 ± 0.4 Bernoux et al., 2006 - (Brazil) tropical and subtropical (0-40 cm): 1.4 to 6.2 Area of CA in Brazil is forecasted to reach 40 Mha in 2020, Cerri et al.(2010) calculated that this will correspond to an additional mitigation of 140 Mt CO 2 -eq in 2010-2020, with 7 Mt CO2-eq corresponding to avoided emission from fossil fuel. Carbon sequestration rates for Conservation Agriculture

13 CA: Benefits and Adoption Obstacles Benefits of conservation agriculture: Increased soil organic matter and fertility increased profitability by reducing costs for soil preparation possibility to have two crops in warmer climates Obstacles to adoption: Challenging technological changes challenges to manage weeds increased cost for herbicides (at least initially) challenges to update farm machinery difficulty to handle crop residues These challenges make adoption easier in larger farms, and more challenging (but not impossible or even less beneficial) in smaller farms. That is why adoption takes time

14 How to promote agriculture investment in line with climate change policies There is a lack of tools that would help project designers to integrate significant climate response activities in agriculture development projects. Investments in such activities would received due attention at project development stage if justified by reasonable carbon ex-ante appraisals FAO developped EX-ACT (Ex-Ante Carbon-balance tool) to help Assessing potential mitigation benefits of agricultural investment projects Set of linked Microsoft Excel sheets (19) Based on land use and management practices Using IPCC default values (Tier 1) and ad hoc coefficients (Tier 2) Measures C-balance with/without project http://www.fao.org/tc/tcs/exact/events/en/

15 Part of the solution is in our hands! Science has brought evidences…. Now…political decisions are also needed Consumers already ask for products with low GHG impact …. How to promote agriculture investment in line with climate change policies


Download ppt "Annual Meeting 2010 Istanbul, 21-22 April Round Table Can agricultural investment coexist with climate change policies? Soil carbon sequestration Martial."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google