quantifying the greenhouse gas benefits of agricultural - eve

15
Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural Conservation and Management Marlen Eve USDA Office of the Chief Scientist Soil and Water Conservation Society, Greensboro, NC, 27 July

Upload: soil-and-water-conservation-society

Post on 19-Aug-2015

157 views

Category:

Environment


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural - Eve

Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of AgriculturalConservation and Management

Marlen EveUSDA Office of the Chief Scientist

Soil and Water Conservation Society, Greensboro, NC, 27 July 2015

Page 2: Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural - Eve

• Project partner: ICF International, Diana Pape and team.

• Lead Authors: Stephen Ogle (CSU); Wendy Powers (MSU); Coeli Hoover (FS)

• Numerous authors, experts, contributors and reviewers.

• Tool Building: Colorado State University; U.S. Forest Service; NRCS

Quantifying Greenhouse Fluxes in Agriculture and Forestry: Methods for Entity-Scale Inventory

Acknowledgements

Page 3: Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural - Eve

Goal: To create a standard set of GHG quantification methods and tools for landowners, USDA, and other stakeholders.• Phase 1: Report outlining comprehensive science-based

methods for entity-scale GHG estimation.• Phase 2: Develop a user-friendly tool that follows the

methods report to provide land owners and managers with reliable and understandable estimates of GHG emissions and C sequestration.

Greenhouse Gas Quantification Methods and Tools for Managers of Integrated Production

Systems in the U.S.A.

Page 4: Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural - Eve

4

REPORT LAYOUT AND CONTENT

• Executive Summary• Introduction• Considerations• Crop and Grazing Lands• Wetlands• Animal Systems• Forest lands• Land Use Change• Uncertainty Assessment

http://www.usda.gov/oce/climate_change/estimation.htm

Page 5: Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural - Eve

The Methods Report is designed to be:• A scientifically vetted means for USDA to provide

local-scale, standardized and transparent estimation of GHG fluxes

• Consistent with the USDA and EPA national GHG inventories

• Aligned with NRCS’s COMET Farm and other USDA GHG tools.

• Coordinated with water quality or other tools to assess environmental services benefits

THE USDA GHG METHODS

5

Page 6: Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural - Eve

Scientific Experts

Public Comment, Final Inter-Agency and USDA Review

May 2012

Feb – March 2013

Sept - Oct 2013

Final Report ReleaseJuly 2014

Science-Based Methods

USDA Tech. Rev.

CCPO

Oct 2011

Inter-Agency Tech. Rev.

May 2012

CHALLENGE: Vetting the methods. Establishing the rigor and transparency of the report.

29 scientific reviewers

38 expert authors

Federal agency experts

21 subject matter experts

Page 7: Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural - Eve

1.Transparency2.Consistency 3.Comparability 4.Completeness 5.Accuracy 6.Cost effectiveness 7.Ease of use

BALANCING ACT Maximize accuracy … but maintain ease of use Complete … but cost effective Stand alone … but consistent and comparable Transparent … but with scientific rigor … and user-friendly

KEY CONSIDERATIONS

Page 8: Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural - Eve

CHALLENGE: Capturing management of the whole operation

Animal Feeding

Operation Lago

ons

Pasture

Crop

TreesTr

ees

Wetland

Forest

Page 9: Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural - Eve

Cropland Grazing Land Livestock

Managed WetlandsForestry Agroforestry

• Fertilizer management• Tillage management• Crop rotations• Cover cropping• Water or residue

mgmt in cultivated rice• Drainage• Irrigation• Biomass burning

• Fertilizer management• Grazing management• Species enhancement• Drainage• Irrigation• Prescribed burning

• Species mix• Biomass

management• Water management

• Animal housing• Feeds and additives• Feeding management• Manure collection and

storage• Composting• Land application of

manure

• Thinning and harvest• Fertilizer management• Species management• Irrigation• Biomass burning• Planting/re-establishing• Clearing and/or land

conversion

• Windbreaks• Alley cropping• Silvopasture• Riparian forest buffers• Forest farming• Species

selection/mgmt• Cropping system/mgmt

Page 10: Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural - Eve

Other equations, emission factors, or new hybrid approaches.

USFS Tools like FVS, FOFEM, and iTree

ARS Tools like DairyGEM, the work of

Rotz and others

CHALLENGE: Bringing all the methods together into a seamless estimation tool.

Page 11: Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural - Eve

COMET-FarmExample: Corn-Soybean Rotation in IowaTillage Reduction

1. Map Your Field:

2. Describe Historic Management:

3. Describe Current Management, Conservation Scenarios

Page 12: Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural - Eve

COMET-FarmCorn-Soybean Rotation in Iowa, Cont’dTillage Reduction

4. Generate Reports:

Page 13: Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural - Eve

COMET USDA GHG Tool

Output Reporting forGHG Decision Support, Quantification and Documentation

Ener

gy U

se

Crop

land

/ G

razi

ng L

and

Live

stoc

k

Entity-Scale GHG Methods Report

Rese

arch

and

Dat

a

REVISIT / REVISE / UPDATE

R&

D

VA

LID

AT

ION

VE

TT

ING

IMPLEMENTATION

IPCC Tier 1

Fore

stry

USDA Forest C Tool

Page 14: Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural - Eve

• Extrapolating from sites to all areas of the U.S.

• Accounting for Climate / soils / management interactions

• Comprehensively accounting for all cropping systems and practices– Agroforestry– Specialty crops– Cover cropping– Fertilizer application– Soil Amendments

• Uncertainty Assessment 14

CHALLENGES:

Page 15: Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Benefits of Agricultural - Eve

Thank you!

Marlen Eve U.S. Department of AgricultureOffice of the Chief [email protected](202) 720-9131

www.usda.gov/climatesolutions

CONTACT INFORMATION