Title: Ecosystem Service Markets in Agriculture 101
1Ecosystem Service Marketsin Agriculture(101)
- American Farmland Trust
- Ann Sorensen
- USDA May 2007
2Ecosystem Service Markets
- Who we are
- Standing at the crossroads
- Ecosystem service markets carbon credits water
quality trading - Synergies
3American Farmland Trust
- Founded in 1980 to save farm and ranch land
- Bring farmers, communities, conservationists,
developers and government officials together to
work out solutions for the common good
4American Farmland Trust
- Saving the land that sustains us
- Protecting the best land
- Planning for growth with agriculture in mind
- Keeping the land healthy
5At the Crossroads
- Globalization continuing pressure to reduce
commodity subsidies and go green - Threat of climate change
- Adapting to severe weather events
- Mitigating greenhouse gases
- Need to address water quality
- Funding trends
6Globalization
- Doha negotiations U.S. policies distort trade
- Pressure from developing nations for change
- U.S. has pledged to give up commodity subsidies
if other countries open up their agricultural
markets to U.S, producers
7Globalization
- World Trade Organization cases
- Brazils success against U.S. cotton
- Canada placing anti-dumping duties against U.S.
corn - Potential others setting the stage for
- dying a death of 1000 cuts
8Climate Change
- Need to Adapt More severe weather may lead to
- Increases in soil erosion ranging from 4 percent
to 95 percent - Increases in runoff from 6 percent to 100 percent
in some locations - Need to employ more conservation practices
9Climate Change
- Could play significant role in mitigation
- Carbon captured and sequestered by U.S. farmland
offsets less than 1 of U.S. emissions (forests
add 10) - BMPs to sequester C could offset 8 to 16 of
total U.S. emissions in the future - Biofuels can help replace fossil fuels
10Water Quality
11Funding Trends
12Vision
- Farms provide ecosystem services along with food
and fiber - Broad public support
- Considered green box under WTO
- Farmers sell environmental services much like
they sell agricultural products - Steady, reliable stream of revenue
13(No Transcript)
14Ecosystem Services
- Retiring cropland reduces soil erosion,
decreases nutrient, pesticide and sediment
loadings. Provides permanent grass/tree cover. -
- Decreased loadings improve water quality and
plantings provide wildlife habitat. - Services Cleaner water, more wildlife
15Wide Range of Credits
16Ecosystem Services
- Carbon markets
- Sequestered carbon (timber and agriculture
currently voluntary markets) - Water quality/Quantity
- Nutrients, sediments, temperature, bacteria,
heavy metals, storm water flows, GW withdrawals
17Other Ecosystem Services
- Stream Mitigation Banking
- Stream channel, banks, buffers, hydrology
- Wetland Mitigation Banks
- Wetlands
- Conservation banks
- Endangered species habitat for pollinators
reptiles birds mammals
18Why now?
- Conservation planning has matured
- Millennium Ecosystem Assessment has categorized
ecosystem services - Economic valuation is helping set prices
- Tools for decision-making emerging
- Small scale efforts underway
- www.ecosystemmarketplace.com
19Carbon Credits
- Global carbon markets have doubled in size over
the past year - Regulated markets 21.5 billion
- Voluntary markets 100 million
- U.S. Companies entering voluntary market
- Ford, Google, DuPont, American Electric Power
(15 of companies surveyed but an additional 40
are considering it)
20Company Motivation
- Fulfill corporate greenhouse gas reduction
targets - Gain carbon market experience
- Prepare for potential regulatory requirements
- Enhance brands and/or differentiate products
- Attract investors
21Agricultural Offsets
- Sequester carbon in the soil
- Reforestation or afforestation of native tree
species - Methane capture and destruction from livestock
- Concerns lack of permanence, science unclear on
measuring and quantifying reductions
22Universal Challenges
- Solid science (unit traded must be definable,
measurable and verifiable) - Appropriate length of contracts
- Determining baselines and identifying synergies
- Creating transparent, credible, efficient,
economical, high confidence markets
23Sequestering Carbon
- BMPs to sequester C could offset 8 to 16 percent
of total U.S. emissions in the future - Currently 2,000 producers in 15 states have sold
carbon credits on 1 million acres.
24Sequestering Carbon
25Synergy Carbon Credits and Climate Adaptation
- Practices to help adapt sequester carbon
- Restoring wetlands, repairing stream channels and
enhancing riparian corridors - Building in redundancy by backing up conservation
tillage with grassed waterways, contour grass
strips, filter strips, riparian buffers, etc.
26Synergy Carbon Credits and CAFOs
- New CAFO regulations may increase demand for land
to apply manure as primary nutrient source - Participation in EQIP, CSP or a carbon credit
market can offset some or all of the costs of
manure application
27Watershed Scale Water Quality Trading Programs
28Watershed Approach
- Most effective and comprehensive approach
- Builds a broad-based community of understanding
- Community-developed desired goals
- Applies many tools to solve water quality
concerns such as nutrients and sediments
29Watershed Approach
- Regulatory Driver Clean Water Act
- National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
(NPDES) - Regulates discharges from municipal and
industrial point sources (including CAFOs) - Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL)
- Sets water quality-based effluent limits
- EPA Water Quality Trading Rule 1-03
30Water Quality Trading Credits
- Can be one of the tools to achieve water quality
in a watershed - Introduces flexibility in the regulatory process
- Allow point sources with high treatment costs to
pay someone else to make a voluntary and surplus
pollutant reduction for a lower cost
31Potential Tradable Pollutants
- Pollutants that
- Come from both point and nonpoint sources
- Transported through stream network without
assimilation - Have a water-quality based effluent limit (TMDL)
32Potential Tradable Pollutants
- For Agriculture
- Phosphorus
- Sediment
- Nitrogen
- Flows and temperature
33Why Should Ag Participate?
- Potential revenue
- Discussions influence stewardship goals
- Agriculture knows what works best on the farm
- Recognition for what it has already done
34Nutrient Credits
- Surplus pollutant reductions (unit of mass over a
period of time) - Can result in a pollutant load reduction gt than
required by permit/TMDL allocation - Measurable
- Generated within same watershed
- Net improvement (trading ratio gt 11)
(discounting)
35Statewide Trading Programs
36State WQT Rules
- Authority for WQT applications
- Eligibility, timing, trading ratios (requiring
retirement of a portion of each trade) - Limits on the amount of credits that a source can
buy to avoid hot spots - Quantification methods for credits
- Transaction framework and enforcement
- Periodic program evaluation requirements
37Types of Trading
- PS/PS between permitted wastewater facilities
- PS/NPS between permitted and nonpermitted
sources with voluntary credits - NPS/NPS between regulated municipal stormwater
permittees and unregulated agriculture
38Why Allow for Trading?
- Cost
- Ancillary environmental benefits
- Additional funding for BMP implementation
- Policy opportunities
39Cost
- Agricultural BMPs can produce pollutant load
reductions at a much lower cost - Wastewater treatment plants face large capital
costs to comply with NPDES permits and TMDLs
40Environmental Benefits
- Sediment load reductions
- Reduced flood peaks (reconnect riparian flood
plains) - Wildlife habitat
- Wetland restoration
- Water temperature reductions
- Assimilative capacity (flood plain storage)
41Additional Funding for BMPs
- Point source polluters pay for conservation
measures on farms - Nutrient management, buffer strips, conservation
tillage, animal exclusion, use of cover crops
(but prefer structures) - Point source polluters can offer higher
cost-sharing rates
42Policy Opportunities
- Can help maintain working lands
- Often accelerates implementation of BMPs
(flexibility revenue stream) - Can result in net benefits (extra reductions
required for each trade) - Allows for equitable decisions in future growth
management
43Setting Up Trading
- Step 1 Farmer installs additional BMPs (above
baseline requirements) from a selection of
approved BMPs - Baseline can be set by TMDL load allocation,
state policy or formal rule, local stakeholder
input or combination of all of these
44Setting Up Trading
- Step 2 Pollutant load reductions from BMP
calculated using standard methods such as RUSLE2
(soil erosion model) - Requirements for credit generation include BMP
selection, implementation period BMP lifespan
quantification of BMP reductions, cost of
installation
45Setting Up Trading
- Step 3 Trading credits must factor in Trading
Ratio calculation using approved ratio that
accounts for uncertainties and provides net water
quality benefits - Trading ratios may contain factors to account for
equivalency, margin of safety, bioavailability
differences, etc.
46Setting Up Trading
- Step 4 Connect credit sellers to buyers
(aggregator, broker or individual contract) - Third party verification of BMP credit,
installation, maintenance and WQ monitoring
legally binding trading agreement between farmer
and credit buyer sellers compliance with PS
contract possibility of middlemen
47Setting Up Trading
- Step 5 Register credits with the state
regulatory agency (MPCA or third party) - Reporting requirements in PS permit web-based
registry (WRIs NutrientNet includes location,
contact and credit calculators) web facilitated
reporting (contracts, reporting forms and lists
current trades)
48Obstacles to Trading
- Low demand may need supporting regulation
- Difficulty in measuring may lead to high
transaction costs (scientific uncertainty) - Farmers may be reluctant to participate in
program that is partly regulatory, even with
compensation afraid information shared could
lead to regulations
49Synergies WQT and EQIP(Breetz Fisher-Vanden,
2007)
- Both employ incentive payments for BMPs
- Encouraging the same types of farmers to
implement the same types of BMPs - Can WQT partner with EQIP?
50EQIP Strengths
- Farmers know and trust EQIP
- Interest in EQIP exceeds available funding
- Established program with fewer sources of
transaction costs
51EQIP Weaknesses
- Doesnt explicitly target water
- Ranks water quality projects against erosion,
forestry and habitat projects - Fuzzier calculation of environmental benefits
- Less attention to cost-effectiveness
- Slightly less monitoring and enforcement
- Constrained by federally-appropriated funds
52WQT Strengths
- Explicitly focused on water quality
- More refined calculation of water quality
benefits - Greater attention to cost-effectiveness
- More stringent monitoring and enforcement
- Draws on private funds and builds local
partnerships - Allows farmers to be fully compensated and even
profit for project implementation
53WQT Weaknesses
- Farmers lack familiarity with and trust in
trading programs - High transaction costs involved in recruiting
farmers
54Problems for WQT Recruiting
- Farmers concerned about regulation (EQIP helps
farmers, NRCS, not EPA, fewer demands on
monitoring and quantifying) - WQT has no ties to agricultural community
- Trading contracts may offer less autonomy in
choice of practices and monitoring - WQT prefers structural stream bank management
practices permanent, easy to monitor but do not
increase net returns
55EQIP WQT Partnership
- Piggybacking
- EQIP advertises to farmers, ranks applications,
signs EQIP contract, administers funding,
monitors BMP implementation and enforces
contracts - WQT provides funding to EQIP
- (example Tar-Pamlico River in NC)
56EQIP WQT Partnership
- Brokering
- EQIP advertises WQT opportunity, determines
eligibility for WQT funding, ranks eligible
projects, signs contract with farmers - WQT provides funding to EQIP for individual
projects monitors BMP implementation enforces
contracts
57EQIP WQT Partnership
- Screening
- EQIP advertises WQT opportunity determines
eligibility for WQT funding passes eligible
farmers to WQT - WQT ranks applications signs WQT contract with
farmers monitors BMP implementation enforces
contracts
58EQIP WQT Partnership
- Recruiting
- EQIP advertises WQT opportunity
- WQT determines eligibility evaluates
applications negotiates with farmers for
preferred BMPs signs WQT contract with farmers
monitors BMP implementation Enforces contracts
59Success of Partnership
- Extent to which project selection tasks can be
shared depends on - the refinement of the local EQIP ranking
criteria - the willingness of NRCS staff to devote time to
WQT
60Water Quality Trading
- The economic and environmental risks of
climate change are fairly well publicized. In
contrast, the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment
flagged hypoxia as an even greater short-term
threat to human livelihoods than climate change.
There are now at least 150 human-induced hypoxic
dead zones in global waters. Given the urgency,
nutrient trading is poised to become the next
truly important market-based conservation tool.
Just as the last decade witnessed the launch and
the almost viral growth of carbon markets, the
next decade could give rise to robust and, large
scale regional schemes for nutrient trading. -
- Forest Trends, NRCS, The Chesapeake Bay
Foundation and The Ecosystem Marketplace May 2007
61Other Considerations
- Consistent/standardized quantification
- Recognizing common environmental outcomes or
metrics across all programs (quality/quantity) - Overlapping environmental commodity markets
(multiple ecosystem services) - Markets take time to develop
62Multiple Markets
- Pennsylvania
- conservation tillage for nutrients, sediment
carbon - Great Miami River, Ohio
- BMPs for nutrients, in-stream habitat carbon
- Florida rangelands
- water storage P habitat enhancement
63Multiple Markets
- Vermillion River, Minnesota
- Water quality (flow temperature sediments
- riparian quality)
- Great Lakes
- Water quality/quantity offsets (flow nutrients
green space wetland banks) - Oregon
- Water temperature (riparian buffers trees)
64Promising Future
- Mentioned in AFBF MAAPP report as a exciting
opportunity - USDA 2007 Farm Bill recommendations include 50
million in mandatory funding to develop uniform
standards for quantifying environmental services,
establish credit registries, and offer credit
audit and certification services
65AFTs Potential Role
- Bringing agriculture to the table
- Pilot projects (ACIC risk management instruments
help producers adopt BMPs multiple credit
markets) - Outreach (listening to agriculture)
- Policies (local, state, federal working with
agriculture to develop and promote policies)
66AFTs Potential Role
- Link academics and agriculture
- Link environmental community and agriculture
- Identify high priority land to protect Protect
farmland to protect future environmental services
(in addition to food and fiber)
67Parting Words
- "The most urgent priority, however, is to put
into practice what we already know, with all the
accompanying warts. We must learn by doing, and
big mistakes will be made, but we cannot afford
to wait for certainty or even a high level of
comfort. We must embrace compromise because doing
better today is more important than doing best
tomorrow." - Craig Cox, Soil Water Conservation Society,
2006
68Source Materials for Ecosystem Services 101
- www.ecosystemmarketplace.com
- Mark Kieser Associates Environmental Trading
Network www.envtn.org - James Salzman, Duke University (farm of the
future) - Breetz Fisher-Vanden, 2007 Review of
Agricultural Economics 29(2) pp 201-215)