Title: CH4 and N2O emissions abatement in agriculture
1CH4 and N2O emissions abatement in agriculture
- A.Fallot and D.Deybe
- Cirad-amis Ecopol
- Workpackage 2 b.
2Objectives of the work-package
- Inventory of costs of land-use related greenhouse
gas (GHG) emission reductions - This implies
- inventory of agricultural practices to reduce
emissions, by GHG and activity category - development of continuous marginal abatement
costs (MAC) curves - comparison of MAC curves and analysis of
potential and least costs strategies
3As a first step,
- Definition of preliminary databases and
specifications for land-use and agricultural GHG
emissions according to various agricultural
practices. - ? two intertwined issues
- data collection
- methodology development
4CIRAD's task is to cover the four following GHG
sources
- enteric fermentation (CH4) depending on the
animal feed, feeding situation, and other
livestock management practices - manure management (CH4 and N2O) depending on
livestock management and possible biogas
production - fertiliser use (N2O), depending on fertilisation
patterns - rice cultivation (CH4) depending on water
management including drainage techniques.
5The order of magnitude of each source differsas
well as their share within each region in the
world
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8CH4 and N2O control strategies imply modification
through
- Technical progress
- Land-use changes
- both, either by intensifying or extensifying
production
9Case study dairy production in OECD Europe
- Higher productivity leads to lower CH4 emissions
for a given output - Increased productivity is both an observable
trend and an IMAGE scenario - Our reference simulations have to be consistent
with IMAGE data - Abatement strategies considered have to go beyond
the reference productivity increase
10Thus the following techniques were explicitly
considered
11For each technique, the following parameters had
to be identified
- Digestibility
- Net energy per unit of production
- Productivity
- CH4 conversion
- Costs (feed, other variable costs per animal,
investment and transmission/extension)
12Exogenous data is (for 2010)
- Livestock size (IMAGE)
- Global requirements per feed category (IMAGE)
- Average productivity/livestock (IMAGE)
- Discount rate (IMAGE)
- Prices (actual)
13The variable defining abatement options
- The relative importance of each technique at the
projection year (2010)
14For the sake of comparison
- An extensification option was also analysed
15Combination of techniques
16Results
17How to build a curve ?
Maximum abatement but is it acceptable by farmers?
Sub-optimal options but possibly more acceptable
18Issues still to be solved
- On the methodology
- construction of continuous marginal abatment
costs curves with few observations and non
systematic changes - On the data
- connection of the different studies on GHG
emission sources - integrated vision consistent within IMAGE if one
activity is intensified, how do the others evolve?