Follow us:
Subscribe to our e-newsletter

logo

  • Energy
  • Construction
  • Resources
  • Agriculture
  • Projects
  • Products and Services
  • Events
  • Online Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Home
  • Energy
  • Construction
  • Resources
  • Agricultutre
  • Projects
  • Products
  • Events
  • Online Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Up-trending farming and landscape disruptions threaten Paris climate agreement goals

02 Feb, 2021
11
Researchers in UCI’s Department of Earth System Science have conducted the most thorough inventory yet of GHG emissions from agriculture and other land use practices. They found many opportunities for mitigation around the world but also learned that “business as usual” may threaten goals set forth in the Paris climate accord. Image credit: Steven Davis/UCI.


One of President Joe Biden’s first post-inauguration acts was to realign the United States with the Paris climate accord, but a new study led by researchers at the University of California, Irvine highlights that rising emissions from human land-use will jeopardise the agreement’s goals without substantial changes in agricultural practices.

In a paper published last week in the journal Nature, the team presented the most thorough inventory yet of land-use contributions to carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases (including nitrous oxide and methane) from 1961 to 2017, taking into account emissions from agricultural production activities and modifications to the natural landscape.

“We estimated and attributed global land-use emissions among 229 countries and areas and 169 agricultural products,” shared lead author Chaopeng Hong, UCI postdoctoral scholar in Earth system science.

“We looked into the processes responsible for higher or lower emissions and paid particularly close attention to trends in net carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted from changes in land use, such as converting forested land into farm acreage.”

The researchers learned that poorer countries in Latin America, Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa experienced the most pronounced surge in these “land-use change” emissions.

East Asia, South Asia and the Middle East produced fewer greenhouse gases as a result of land-use change, according to the study, but the regions’ agricultural emissions were notably rising as output raced to keep up with population expansion. And more affluent North America, Europe and Oceania showed negative land-use change emissions but nonetheless substantial farm-originated pollution.

“While the situation in low-income countries is critical, mitigation opportunities in these places are large and clear,” said senior author Steve Davis, UCI associate professor of Earth system science.

“Improving yields on already cultivated land can avoid clearing more carbon-dense forests for cultivation of soybeans, rice, maize and palm oil, thereby drastically reducing land-use emissions in these countries.”

The authors suggest that nations in emerging and developed markets also can lessen the emissions intensity of agriculture by adopting more efficient tilling and harvesting methods, by better soil and livestock waste management, and by reducing food waste.

Dietary changes could also help, according to the study, which outlines that while red meat supplies only about 1 per cent of calories produced globally, it’s responsible for up to a quarter of the world’s land-use greenhouse gas emissions.

Europe has the lowest land-use emissions, at 0.5 tonnes per person per year, the researchers note, but the figure is substantially higher almost everywhere else, and as the planet’s population continues to increase, farmers and policymakers will need to meet and exceed current best practices.

The paper highlights some promising technological solutions, such as new ways of cultivating rice that create less methane and dietary supplements for cattle that reduce their harmful emissions by up to 95 per cent.

“Feeding the planet may always generate substantial greenhouse gas emissions,” said Davis, a member of the executive board of UCI’s Solutions that Scale initiative which seeks answers to the planet’s most pressing climate and environmental problems.

“Even if we get emissions down to European levels worldwide, with expected population growth, we could still be looking at more than 5 gigatonnes of land-use emissions per year in 2100, an amount at odds with ambitious international climate goals unless offset by negative emissions.”

The project – funded by the National Science Foundation, the German Research Foundation, and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation – also included researchers from the University of California, San Diego; Colorado State University; Stanford University; and Germany’s Max Planck Institute for Meteorology.

Related Articles

Equinor selected for largest-ever U.S. offshore wind award

Carbon farming project to create jobs and benefits across Queensland

Amazon announces new solar project in Victoria

Methane-busting seaweed farms on track for 2021 production

Comments

Leave a comment Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Latest Posts

  • Energy
  • Construction
  • Resources
  • Agriculture
04 Mar

Consultation on Electric Vehicle Road User Charge to commence this week

03 Mar

Electric bus company gears up for zero-emission growth

03 Mar

New EV sales figures show Australia stalled with hazards flashing

03 Mar

Sweet deal sees Mars Australia hit 100 per cent renewable electricity

02 Mar

After a steep drop in early 2020, global CO2 emissions have rebounded strongly

25 Feb

Research finds bushfires should change where and how Australians live

22 Feb

Funding to support the use of recycled materials in infrastructure projects

15 Feb

Is building with timber really sustainable?

12 Feb

NREL heats up thermal energy storage with solution to ease grid stress

10 Feb

Report highlights opportunities to reduce emissions in Brazil’s cement sector

05 Mar

Chevron invests in geothermal development company

04 Mar

Minerals processing roadmap: An opportunity for jobs and climate

02 Mar

Researchers stress hidden pollution from shipping threatens sustainable ocean efforts

02 Mar

MOU signed for green hydrogen in heavy goods transport

26 Feb

ExxonMobil tests advanced recycling of plastic waste in Texas

05 Mar

Carbon+Biodiversity Pilot to reward farmers for increasing biodiversity

03 Mar

Research into white-rot fungi proves value in carbon sequestration from lignin

16 Feb

Researchers call for further action on cadmium

16 Feb

‘See through soil’ could help farmers deal with future droughts

12 Feb

Andhra Pradesh makes progress in achieving solar target for farming needs

Online Magazine

    Current Cover
  • Login
  • Subscribe

Subscribe

Subscribe to our newsletter

Our Titles

  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy
© Sage Media Group 2021 All Rights Reserved.
×
Authorization
  • Registration
 This feature has been disabled
 This feature has been disabled until further notice, however you may still register
×
Registration
  • Autorization
Register
* All fields required