Soil carbon sequestration rates and associated economic costs for farming systems of south-eastern Australia


Autoria(s): Grace, Peter; Antle, John; Ogle, Stephen; Paustian, Keith; Basso, Bruno
Data(s)

2010

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/43301/

Publicador

CSIRO Publishing

Relação

DOI:10.1071/SR10063

Grace, Peter, Antle, John, Ogle, Stephen, Paustian, Keith, & Basso, Bruno (2010) Soil carbon sequestration rates and associated economic costs for farming systems of south-eastern Australia. Australian Journal of Soil Research, 48(8), pp. 720-729.

Fonte

Faculty of Science and Technology; Institute for Sustainable Resources

Palavras-Chave #050000 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES #060000 BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES #070000 AGRICULTURAL AND VETERINARY SCIENCES #carbon sequestration, conservation tillage, economics, greenhouse gases
Tipo

Journal Article

Resumo

Soil organic carbon (C) sequestration rates based on the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) methodology were combined with local economic data to simulate the economic potential for C sequestration in response to conservation tillage in the six agro-ecological zones within the Southern Region of the Australian grains industry. The net C sequestration rate over 20 years for the Southern Region (which includes discounting for associated greenhouse gases) is estimated to be 3.6 or 6.3 Mg C/ha after converting to either minimum or no-tillage practices, respectively, with no-till practices estimated to return 75% more carbon on average than minimum tillage. The highest net gains in C per ha are realised when converting from conventional to no-tillage practices in the high-activity clay soils of the High Rainfall and Wimmera agro-ecological zones. On the basis of total area available for change, the Slopes agro-ecological zone offers the highest net returns, potentially sequestering an additional 7.1 Mt C under no-tillage scenario over 20 years. The economic analysis was summarised as C supply curves for each of the 6 zones expressing the total additional C accumulated over 20 years for a price per t C sequestered ranging from zero to AU$200. For a price of $50/Mg C, a total of 427 000 Mg C would be sequestered over 20 years across the Southern Region, <5% of the simulated C sequestration potential of 9.1 Mt for the region. The Wimmera and Mid-North offer the largest gains in C under minimum tillage over 20 years of all zones for all C prices. For the no-tillage scenario, for a price of $50/Mg C, 1.74 Mt C would be sequestered over 20 years across the Southern Region, <10% of the simulated C sequestration potential of 18.6 Mt for the region over 20 years. The Slopes agro-ecological zone offers the best return in C over 20 years under no-tillage for all C prices. The Mallee offers the least return for both minimum and no-tillage scenarios. At a price of $200/Mg C, the transition from conventional tillage to minimum or no-tillage practices will only realise 19% and 33%, respectively, of the total biogeochemical sequestration potential of crop and pasture systems of the Southern Region over a 20-year period.