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Title: Sectorial Budgets: Methods, Quantities, Issues - Agriculture


1
Sectorial Budgets Methods, Quantities, Issues -
Agriculture
Pete Smith
School of Biological Sciences, University of
Aberdeen, UK
Regional Carbon Budgets from methodologies to
quantification. Beijing, China. 15-18 November
2004
2
Outline
  • Why croplands?
  • Methods
  • Methodologies
  • Data
  • Other issues
  • Results and trends

3
Outline
  • Why croplands?
  • Methods
  • Methodologies
  • Data
  • Other issues
  • Results and trends

4
Distribution of croplands globally
5
Distribution of croplands in Europe
6
Why croplands?
  • European croplands (for Europe as far east as the
    Urals) lose 300 Mt C y-1 (Janssens et al., 2003)
  • Mean figure for the European Union (EU15)
    estimated to be 78 (SD 37) Mt C y-1
    (Vleeshouwers Verhagen, 2002)
  • Largest biospheric source of carbon lost to the
    atmosphere in Europe each year
  • Highest uncertainty of all European fluxes
  • There is significant potential to decrease the
    flux of carbon to the atmosphere from cropland,
    and for cropland management to sequester soil
    carbon.

7
Carbon fluxes in SOC in Europe (t C ha-1 y-1) in
the 1st commitment period (business as usual
scenario)
Using mean soil organic carbon content minus S.D.
Using mean soil organic carbon content
Using mean soil organic carbon content plus S.D.
Vleeshouwers Verhagen (2002)
Croplands
Grasslands
8
Croplands in the overall carbon balance of Europe
Cropland flux
Main figure from Janssens et al., Science 2003
9
Outline
  • Why croplands?
  • Methods
  • Methodologies
  • Data
  • Other issues
  • Results and trends

10
Methods - methodologies
  • Top-down and bottom up (see Ivans talk)
  • Flux network
  • SOMNET
  • Experiments
  • IPCC NGGIs
  • Models / databases

11
CarboEurope IP Building blocks
12
The way CarboEurope works
1000 km
10 km
Upscaling Prediction
ha
dm
µm
Downscaling Verification
13
Clusters for Ecosystem measurements
14
Courtesy of T. Laurila et al.
15
Two years of NEE measurements in the peat
soileddy covariance method
Courtesy of T. Laurila et al.
16
CO2 exchange measurements with a transparent
ecosystem chamber
Soil respiration chamber
Courtesy of T. Laurila et al.
17
Participants in GCTE SOMNET
Europe

86 Experiments
N. America

20 Models
10 Experiments
7 Models
Asia

10 Experiments
1 Model
S. America

3 Experiments
Africa

Australasia

3 Experiments
8 Experiments
3 Models
Totals 120 Experiments, 31 Models
18
Long-term experiments in EuroSOMNET
19
Outline
  • Why croplands?
  • Methods
  • Methodologies
  • Data
  • Other issues
  • Results and trends

20
Methods - data
  • Climate
  • Historical
  • Reconstruction for equilibrium / historical
    spin-up relatively straightforward
  • Predictive
  • Future scenarios (IPCC-SRES), implementation by
    different GCMs (difference as large between GCMs
    as between scenarios)

21
Methods - data
  • Land-use
  • Historical
  • Reconstruction difficult.
  • Land use history poorly documented.
  • RS data from 1980-1990s only.
  • Inconsistency of land-based survey systems.
  • Net changes are measured how do these reflect
    gross changes?
  • How to spatialise statistical data available at
    region only.
  • Predictive
  • Future scenarios are driven by socio-economics
  • Even for regional budgets a global perspective is
    required (land requirements, trade etc.)
  • Need to be consistent with climate scenario
    narratives e.g. IPCC-SRES.
  • How to implement? with rule based land
    allocation model, other methods should this be
    done regionally or globally?
  • How to allow for institutional constraints and
    autonomous adaptation in land-use management
    decisions?

22
Methods - data
  • Land-management
  • Same arguments as for land-use plus activity data
    (i.e. how the land is managed)
  • Even more likely to be statistical /
    non-spatially explicit
  • Land use / management history (see above)
  • Critical for correct dynamics in current C budget
    and future trends

23
Data and models used for assessment of soil C
change
  • Biological systems models
  • Soil carbon dynamics (RothC)
  • C returns from increased productivity (Sundial)
  • DGVMs for NPP (LPJ)
  • Soil geographic database (EU-JRC Pedotransfer
    function model)
  • Climate models Climate drivers
  • Emission scenarios (IPCC-SRES-IMAGE 2.0)
  • General circulation models (GCMs HadCM3, PCM,
    CSIRO2, CGCM2)
  • Regional downscaling models (UEA regional GCM
    interpolator)
  • Integrated assessment models emissions and land
    demand
  • Biospheric processes (IMAGE 2.0)
  • Socio-economic drivers (IMAGE 2.0)
  • Energy sector GHG emissions (IMAGE 2.0)
  • Land-use change models land use and management
  • Yield change model
  • Human and Physical geography (UCL LUC model)
  • Economic decision making (autonomous adaptation)
    - (UCL LUC model)
  • Resource base (IMAGE 2.0 and UCL LUC model)

24
Outline
  • Why croplands?
  • Methods
  • Methodologies
  • Data
  • Other issues
  • Results and trends

25
Methods other issues
  • Full GHG budgets
  • especially important for agriculture (e.g. N2O
    from soils and CH4 from rice paddies / enteric
    fermentation).
  • Lots of trade-offs as well as synergies.
  • Also for forestry and energy?
  • Interactions between regions
  • Interaction between sectors
  • e.g. biofuels, agroforestry, grass-crop rotations
    etc.
  • Incorporating the human dimension

26
Importance of non-CO2 GHGs
27
Agricultural non-CO2 GHG emissions in Europe
28
C mitigation potential with and without trace
gases
Smith et al. (2001)
29
Methods other issues
  • Full GHG budgets especially important for
    agriculture (e.g. N2O from soils and CH4 from
    rice paddies / enteric fermentation). Lots of
    trade-offs as well as synergies. Also for
    forestry and energy?
  • Interactions between regions
  • Interaction between sectors
  • e.g. biofuels, agroforestry, grass-crop rotations
    etc.
  • Incorporating the human dimension

30
Outline
  • Why croplands?
  • Methods
  • Methodologies
  • Data
  • Other issues
  • Results and trends

31
RothC
co
2
RESIDUE
soil surface
DPM
RPM
BIO
HUM
IOM
-1
-1
-1
k10 y
k0.3 y
k0.66 y
k
-1
0.02 y
32
Results
  • Climate only

33
Climate-only impact on SOC
(effect of different GCMs)
34
Climate-only impact on SOC
(effect of different climate scenarios)
35
Change in cropland SOC climate only
36
Climate data 2080-1990 temperature
Note 2080 and 1990 are 30 year averages of
2051-2080 and 1961-1990 respectively
37
Climate data 2080-1990 water balance
Note 2080 and 1990 are 30 year averages of
2051-2080 and 1961-1990 respectively
38
What will happen to cropland soil C fluxes in
21st Century?
A1FI
A2
p lt 0.01
p lt 0.01
B1
B2
p lt 0.05
n.s.
Climate only
39
Results
  • Adding NPP technology

40
Comparing climate-only with climate NPP
technology (HadCM3-A2)
41
Change in cropland SOC climate only.
42
Change in cropland SOC climate, NPP tech.
43
Results
  • Adding the effects of land-use change

44
Effect of changing land-use
Cropland
45
Conclusions
  • Need a full GHG balance not just carbon
  • Need to fully account for human dimension (e.g.
    land manager decisions) via
  • Land use
  • Land management
  • Political, economic, social and institutional
    constraints
  • Data is an issue, especially
  • Regional differences in predicted climate
  • Future land-use change
  • Historical land use survey inconsistencies,
    lack of RS before 1980s
  • Net rather than gross land-use changes
  • Spatialisation of non-spatial data
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