1 / 12

Mitigation of non CO2 Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Agriculture

Mitigation of non CO2 Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Agriculture. Presentation to the in-session workshop of the Ad-hoc Working Group New Zealand Delegation to COP/MOP12. Agriculture greenhouse gas emissions. Represents ~14% of global GHG emissions Represents ~7.4% of Annex 1 emissions

kaia
Download Presentation

Mitigation of non CO2 Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Agriculture

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mitigation of non CO2 Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Agriculture Presentation to the in-session workshop of the Ad-hoc Working Group New Zealand Delegation to COP/MOP12

  2. Agriculture greenhouse gas emissions • Represents ~14% of global GHG emissions • Represents ~7.4% of Annex 1 emissions • Represents ~26% of non-Annex 1 emissions • Mitigation options are relatively limited

  3. Agriculture is important • Agriculture supplies food to the world – population expected to increase from 6 billion to 9 billion by 2050 • Agriculture is important for the sustainable development of communities and national economies, for both developed and developing countries

  4. Industrial processes 5.6% (mainly CO2) Solvents 0.1% fertiliser 3% Energy – otherprocesses 15.1% (CO2) urine 15% methane 31% Transport 19.2% (CO2) air travel 1.3% Agriculture 49.4% (methane and nitrous oxide) Electricity 8.1% (CO2) Waste 2.5% (mainly methane) New Zealand emissions

  5. NZ agriculture situation • A reliance on the export of primary products • Dynamic land use – meeting market demand • 49% of total GHG emissions from agriculture (highest of any developed country) • Highly efficient production

  6. NZ’s agriculture emissions profile

  7. The challenge • Biological systems are complex • 64% of New Zealand’s agricultural emissions have no current feasible mitigation solution • At present, practical mitigation options for grazing ruminants and grazed pastures are limited • More research is required globally, however, this is of a lower priority in most developed countries

  8. Current focus in agriculture • PGGRC – a government/sector partnership for agriculture research • Measurement crucial • Technology adoption becoming more of a focus

  9. Mitigation of ruminant methane emissions • Animal variability • Genetics (variation between animals – 14-26 g-CH4/kg dm intake) • Nutrition • Production system • Microbial • Direct modification of microbial processes: Protozoa, Acetogens, Phage, Methanogens • Vaccination • Monensin (up to 10%) - in grain diets – forage diets 0% • Medium chain fats • Plants • Plant extracts • Plant species (tannins up to 10%) • High sugar grasses

  10. Mitigation of nitrous oxide emissions • Reduce the amount of excreta N • Replace N boosted grass with maize silage • High sugar grasses • Shift N balance from urine to dung • Increase N efficiency of excreta and N fertiliser • Restricted grazing of dairy and beef animals • Effluent utilisation on dairy farms • Nitrogen fertiliser timing, rates and forms • Nitrification inhibitors – DCD has real promise and is commercially available in NZ • Avoid anaerobic soil conditions • Improve drainage • Avoid compaction

  11. Conclusions • There is no simple single solution for CH4 and N2Ofrom agriculture - a package of measures will be required • Reducing methane emissions from grazing ruminants currently has limited options available • Options need to be evaluated at the farm scale and for all three major GHGs collectively – GHG footprint of total system • GHG measurement will continue to be an issue • Increased international effort – particularly in ruminant methane mitigation in pastoral agriculture is needed

More Related