Agriculture cutbacks needed to meet Paris climate agreement: Recent Study

DNA India , Thursday, May 19, 2016
Correspondent : ANI
Paris climate agreement cannot be met sans cutting emissions from farming, according to a recent study.

Scientists from the University of Vermont, the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) and partner institutions calculated, for the first time, the extent to which agricultural emissions must be reduced to meet the new climate agreement's plan to limit warming to 2° Celsius in 2100.

They estimated that the agriculture sector must reduce non-CO2(carbon dioxide) emissions by 1 gigaton per year by 2030. Yet in-depth analysis also revealed a major gap between the existing mitigation options for the agriculture sector and the reductions needed and the current interventions would only deliver between 21-40% of mitigation required.

The authors warn that emission reductions in other sectors such as energy and transport will be insufficient to meet the new climate agreement.

They argue that agriculture must also play its part, proposing that the global institutions concerned with agriculture and food security set a sectoral target linked to the 2° Celsius warming limit to guide more ambitious mitigation and track progress toward goals.

"This research is a reality check," comments researcher LiniWollenberg. "Countries want to take action on agriculture, but the options currently on offer won't make the dent in emissions needed to meet the global targets agreed to in Paris. We need a much bigger menu of technical and policy solutions, with a major investment to bring them to scale."

119 nations included mitigation in agriculture in their Intended Nationally Determined Contributions submitted to The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). However, no work has been carried out to determine how these pledges will be accomplished.

Focusing more attention on sequestering soil carbon, increasing agroforestry, decreasing food loss and waste and shifting dietary patterns could all contribute significantly to reducing emissions from agriculture, according to the authors. However, much less work has been done on mitigation of emissions from these sources, so prompt action is needed now to identify options and their impacts.

 
SOURCE : http://www.dnaindia.com/world/report-agriculture-cutbacks-needed-to-meet-paris-climate-agreement-2213525
 


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