Agriculture
and climate change
Why farms may be the
new forests
Dec 30th 2009
From The
Economist print
edition
http://www.economist.com/world/international/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15179766
In the war against
climate change, peasants are in the front line
Into battle in the eco-war
FOR people who see
stopping deforestation as the quickest climate-change win, Copenhagen
seemed a success. Although there is still work to be done on the
initiative known as REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and
Forest Degradation), the deal struck in Copenhagen made it into a real
thing, not just an idea. The notion of reducing net deforestation to
zero was not explicitly mentioned, but it looks much more credible
than it did two years ago.
As well as giving heart to the protectors of trees, this outcome is
encouraging for people whose focus is not on forests but on fields.
Climate and agriculture matter to each other in several ways. On the
downside, farming is a cause of deforestation, and also emits
greenhouse gases in its own right-perhaps 14% of the global total.
On the upside, agriculture can also dispose of heat-trapping gases, by
increasing the carbon content of soils.
And because farmers (unlike
say, coal-producers) feel the effects of the changes their activities
may be causing, they have a role in adapting to climate change. Farms,
particularly marginal ones, are the first to suffer when the climate
shifts; increase their resilience and you help a lot of people.
Whether the aim is adaptation to climate change or slowing it, there
is an obvious need for more research on the benign contributions that
agriculture can make. For people who are seized of this need, there
was a welcome boost on December 16th when 21 countries pledged $150
billion to a Global Research Alliance on Agricultural Greenhouse
Gases.
One of the attractions of a focus on agriculture is that even poor
countries have farms; in some cases credits for carbon newly locked
away in their soil may be a more plausible way of attracting money
than rewards for low-carbon industrialisation. A more remote
possibility is that such countries will earn credits by hosting
efforts to pump carbon dioxide out of the air and store it
away.
Such "geoengineering" is
still seen as far-fetched and in some circles misguided, but a
reference to it was made in the Copenhagen documents. It was cited as
a possible future direction for the Clean Development Mechanism, which
provides credits for carbon-saving projects in poorer countries. In
the aftermath of negotiations with a hint of slash-and-burn, new seeds
may be taking root.
Global Research Alliance Launched at the U.N. Climate
Change Conference in Copenhagen
http://www.usda.gov/blog/usda/entry/h2_global_research_alliance_launched
Today in
Copenhagen, agricultural research took center stage at the United
Nations Climate Change Conference when Ministers from 17 countries and
I launched a Global Research Alliance that will help us better
understand how agriculture can help reduce greenhouse gases while also
growing more food. USDA will commit up to $90 Million over four
years towards this scientific Alliance that we hope will broaden our
existing research networks and build new ones.
While the Alliance originally was developed in close cooperation
between New Zealand and the U.S., other countries have eagerly
embraced this opportunity to work together to make the world's
agricultural system part of the solution to climate change. The
Alliance will bring together our nations' best agricultural
scientists to develop the science and technologies farmers around the
world need to reduce greenhouse gases and yet ensure agriculture will
continue to meet the world's growing needs for food, feed, fiber,
and biofuels.
(Plant physiologist Jack Morgan (left) and soil scientist Ron Follett
(right) discuss research projects at ARS GRACEnet sites across the
United States while physical science technician Ed Buenger conducts
mass spectrophotometer analysis of soil samples for carbon and
nitrogen.)
The
Alliance will focus on improving the measurement and estimation of
greenhouse gas emissions and carbon storage in different agricultural
systems around the globe. These collaborative efforts will help
develop consistent methods to measure and estimate greenhouse gas
emissions and carbon storage and improve the monitoring of mitigation
efforts which are essential to reducing the impacts of climate change
and demonstrating the effectiveness of our greenhouse gas reduction
strategies.
Through this Alliance each nation will be able to bring its unique
capabilities and expertise to bear on limiting the buildup of gases
that are causing climate change. The Alliance also offers
opportunities for capacity building and training of scientists; and
welcomes new members. Through partnerships among researchers in
participating countries the Alliance will develop new knowledge and
technologies that farmers and other land and natural resource managers
can use to mitigate greenhouse gases. This includes
cost-effective and accurate ways of measuring greenhouse gas emissions
and carbon stored in soil; new farming practices that reduce emissions
and increase carbon storage in farmland in different countries; and
farming methods that sustain yields while helping to mitigate climate
change.
Alliance members all recognize the important link between food
security and climate change. We also recognize that climate change is
an enormous issue for agriculture that requires an unprecedented
global effort. The world's food and agricultural system is
especially vulnerable to the impacts of climate change and faces
significant challenges in meeting increasing global food demand.
Climatic stresses could have real consequences on food
production, dramatically affecting the yields of staple food crops,
resulting in scarcity and threatening people's livelihoods,
particularly in developing nations. A study by the International Food
Policy Research Institute suggests that rice and wheat yields in
developing nations could decrease as much as 19% and 34% respectively
by 2050 due to the effects of climate change.
(Left: Using closed vented chambers, biological science aide Rochelle
Jansen (right) and soil scientist Jane Johnson collect gas emissions
from soil. Samples will be analyzed for carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide,
and methane with a gas chromatograph.)
(Right: Soil scientist Ron Follett examines a soil profile beneath a
native grassland site near Woodward, Oklahoma, before collecting
samples for soil carbon analysis.)
We also
know that agriculture contributes around 15% to global greenhouse gas
emissions and that agriculture and forestry have unique capabilities
that can help off-set greenhouse gas emissions. Agricultural and
forested lands have enormous potential to store additional carbon
offering new economic opportunities for farmers and rural communities
everywhere. Agriculture has the opportunity to reduce its own
greenhouse gas emissions and increase carbon storage by improving
efficiency and productivity of agricultural systems through improved
management practices and technologies. These improvements also would
help build the resilience and adaptive capacity of the world's food
production systems and make them more sustainable while meeting the
increasing demand for food. President Obama has made climate change
one of his top domestic priorities through policies advancing clean
energy and by engaging the international community; and I have made it
a top priority, along with global food security, for agriculture and
ag research.
Through this Alliance forged today, agriculture will have a unique
opportunity to make a real difference in finding solutions to two of
the most difficult challenges the world faces today, global climate
change and food security. I look forward to working with the other
Alliance members to develop partnerships with farmer organizations,
the private sector, international research institutions, and others to
enhance our research efforts to bring practical solutions for climate
change mitigation to the world's farmers.
Secretary of Agriculture, Tom Vilsack