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Carbon Sequestration in European Agricultural Soils
by 2010 - Potential, Uncertainties, Policy Impacts
Annette Freibauer[[email protected]]
Mark D. A. RounsevellPete Smith
Jan VerhagenUCL
Vleeshouwers & Verhagen, GCB 2002
C fluxes in SOC in the 1st commitment period: BAU
t C ha-1 y-1
Croplandmean flux: +0.83 (0.40) t C ha-1 y-1 (source)Total in EU-15: 77 (37) Tg C y-1
Grasslandmean flux: -0.60 (0.65) t C ha-1 y-1 (sink?)Total in EU-15: -30 (32) Tg C y-1
Total agricultural soilsTotal in EU-15: 48 (37) Tg C y-1 (source)
Most promising measures
1 Promote organic input on arable land instead of grassland (crop residues, cover crops, FYM, compost, sewage sludge)
2 Permanent revegetation of arable set-aside land (e.g. afforestation) or extensivation of arable production by introduction of perennial components
3 Biofuel production with short-rotation coppice plantations and perennial grasses on arable set-aside land
4 Promote organic farming
5 Promote permanently shallow water table in farmed peatland
6 Zero tillage / conservation tillage
Organic input
Reduced tillage
Extensification
Bioenergy crops
Organic farming
Longer leys
Permanent grass
Peatlands
t C-e
qu. h
a-1 y
-1
-0.5
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.05.0
6.0
CO2
CH4
N2O
Cropland Grassland Peatland
Potential per unit area
Uncertainty: spatial variability, soil and climate types; no human components
Factors limiting carbon sequestration
Sink saturation
Non-permanence
Availability of land and resources
Adoption of measures / contiguous?
Area and resources available
total area limitations suitable area million ha million ha
Cropland 73 more organic input organic material ~60? reduced tillage climate, soil 63? extensification, perennials set-aside land 7.3 bioenergy crops set-aside land 7.3 organic farming now 2% of cropland 7
Grassland (in rotation) 8.4 longer duration of leys no need: set-aside 7.3 from leys to permanent grass no need: set-aside 7.3 Peatland in agriculture 3.6 restoration of drained soil highly productive <1-2
Ramsar, CBD!
Uncertainty: adoption rate, adoption time?
Organic input
Reduced tillage
Extensification
Bioenergy crops
Organic farming
Longer leys
Permanent grass
Restoration
Tg
C-e
qu. y
-1 in
EU
-15
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
C sequestrationGHG reduction
Cropland Grassland Peatland
Feasible Potential in EU-15
Uncertainty: spatial variability, adoption, permanence of adoption
Environmental effects
Tillage Amendments Extensif. Peatland
Herbizides, pestizides
Non-CO2 gases
NH3, NOx
Biodiversity
Water quality
Soil quality
Sustainable land management
Productivity?
?
?
?
?
Farm incomeOrganic amendments positive long-term, easy, cheap
Bioenergy crops region-specific, emerging marketsOrganic farming region-specific, emerging markets
Reduced tillage region-specific, risks, long-term benefits
Extensification region-specific, compensation payments?Peatland restoration region-specific, compensation payments?
• Judgements about farm incomes are always qualified by location – we cannot generalise!
• different soil types, climates and farm structures • A modelling approach to address this problem and to
provide better quantification?
Policy impacts
Putting C sequestration options into a real-world context influenced by policy
Policy effects(post 1990)
Other effects
Land usechange
C sequestrationpotential
Policy changes post 1990
• Radical changes in the structure of the CAP driven by the 1992 MacSharry reforms and Agenda 2000
• From production-based price support to area payments and set-aside
• A wealth of rural development and agri-environmental policies
Policy effects on land use
• Market support (intervention, import duties) that maintain producer prices
• Production controls - quota: number of dairy cows declining - set aside: C sequestration, biofuels
• Direct aid payments (arable area, agri-environment)- change in permanent crop production systems- maintenance of meadows in LFA- forestation of agricultural land
Conclusions (1)
• Policy changes post 1990 have probably had an overall +ve effect on C sequestration
• But, uncertainties surround the effects of some policies (LFAs, NVZs, organic) and their impacts on farm incomes
• Policy could contribute further to soil C sequestration in Europe
• Further research should target policy as well as management options, be geographically explicit and tackle impacts on farm incomes
Conclusions (2): Caveats
C balance in grasslands?
What measures are best adjusted to regional management preferences?
Regional land use / land management historyRegional best practice
Permanent, contiguous, long-term adoption of measures?Monitoring!Costs?
Regional modelling for potential, adoption, income necessary
Regional refinement of policy measures necessary
Availability of land and resources / potential
Soil carbon sequestration (Mt CO2 y-1) Measure Limiting factor Theoretical Technical Economic?
all agric. Given feasible land used limitation by 2012
Cropland Zero-tillage Suitable land = 63 Mha 103 89.28 8.93 Reduced-tillage Suitable land = 63 Mha < 103 <89.28 <8.93
Set-aside <10% of arable; < 7.3 Mha 103 Max = 8.93 0 Perennial grasses and permanent crops No incentives to grow more 165 0? 0? Deep-rooting crops Research and breeding
needed for annual crops 165 0? 0? Animal manure Manure avail. = 385 Mt dm y-1 100 86.83 ? Crop residues Surplus straw = 5.3 Mt dm y-1 185 90.46 ? Sewage sludge Sewage sludge = 71 Mt dm y-1 69 6.30 ? Composting Compost available at present
= 160 t dm y-1 (8 M ha) 100 11 11? Improved rotations 0 >0 0? Fertilisation 0 0 0 Irrigation 0 0 0
Bioenergy crops only current set-aside = 7.3 Mha 165 16.52 3.3 Extensification current set-aside to extensify
30% of arable agr. = 20 Mha 144 41.63 ? Organic farming Could increase to 10% = 7.3 Mha 0-144 14.40 14.4
Availability of land and resources / potential
Soil carbon sequestration (Mt CO2 y-1) Measure Limiting factor Theoretical Technical Economic?
all agric. Given feasible land used limitation by 2012
Grassland ? Knowledge! ? ? ?
Revegetation
Abandoned arable land current set-aside = 7.3 Mha 165 16.52 Max. 16.52
Land conversion Arable to woodland current set-aside = 7.3 Mha 165 16.52 Max. 16.52 Arable to grassland current set-aside = 7.3Mha 140 14 0 Grassland to Land-use change since 1990 arable calculated as 2.7 Mha -266 -10 (since 1990) Future = 0 Permanent crops Land-use change since 1990 to arable calculated as 0.4 Mha -42.5 -1.46 (since 1990) 0 Woodland to Negligible land-use change arable since 1990 =>-266 0 0
Availability of land and resources / potential
Soil carbon sequestration (Mt CO2 y-1) Measure Limiting factor Theoretical Technical Economic?
all agric. Given feasible land used limitation by 2012
Farmed organic soils Protection and Assuming all cultivated restoration organic soils are restored >36 >36 >36 Avoid row crops and tubers No incentive 0 GHG: 2 0? 0? Avoid deep ploughing No incentive 3 GHG: 3 0? 0? More shallow Possibly attractive on grass- water table land when new melioration
is needed = 50 % of grass- 36 GHG: 36 15 15 land area = 1.5 Mha Convert arable to grassland No incentive 3 GHG: 3 0? 0? Convert arable Subsidies compensate income to woodland losses: adoption rate max. 2 GHG: 3 1 1
50 % of arable area = 0.3 Mha
Non-CAP effects• Technological change (plant & animal breeding)• World markets & international trade agreements• Changing consumer preferences – less meat, shifts
from olive to sunflower oil, etc.• Opportunity costs of labour, i.e. competition with
other sectors• Land degradation (e.g. erosion)• Irrigation water availability and quality• Education and information dissemination