HONG KONG -- Agriculture is known as a major contributor to
greenhouse gas emissions, but a new study finds that organic
farming can reverse the agriculture ecosystem from a carbon source
to a carbon sink.
In a paper published in Science
Bulletin, a group of scientists estimated that more than 1
billion tons of excess carbon dioxide can be stored in China's
farmlands annually through regenerative organic farming, ranching
and land use. Meanwhile, crop yields can also increase as the soil
fertility is improved by the use of organic manure.
"To mitigate greenhouse gas emissions and retain soil fertility,
organic agriculture might be a wise choice for decreasing the
intensive use of synthetic fertilizers, protecting environments,
and further improving crop yields," the scientists said.
They demonstrated how to do so by integrating organic farming with
cattle breeding in a rural area of eastern China's Shandong
province. The majority of nutrient inputs in farmlands there
traditionally came from chemical fertilizer. During the
experimental run, the scientists fed cattle with crop residues,
collected and composted cattle manure, and used it to replace
chemical fertilizer for crop production.
The study's finding shows that although cattle breeding causes
higher emissions of methane and other type of greenhouse gases, the
new practice still sequesters more carbon, thanks to crop residue
recycling and chemical reduction.
Putting that into numbers, the study notes, farmlands using cattle
manure absorb greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to 8.8 tons of
carbon dioxide per hectare every year. By contrast, the farmland
using chemical fertilizer releases greenhouse gas emissions
equivalent to 2.7 tons of carbon dioxide.
Besides that, turning crop residues into animal feed helps make
full use of agricultural waste. According to the scientists'
estimation, China produces about 630 million tons of crop residues
annually, with more than two-thirds of them being abandoned or
burned -- causing air pollution and driving up greenhouse gas
emissions.
World's biggest agricultural emitter has options
Unlike ranchers in Brazil who have cleared forests to build
facilities for cattle, most farmers in eastern China enclose part
of their existing agricultural land as cattle pasture. As a result,
emissions from land-use change are barely a concern there.
A 2011 report from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations says that agriculture causes about one-third of
global greenhouse gas emissions when direct energy use; emissions
from livestock; the production of fertilizers, pesticides,
machinery and equipment; as well as soil degradation and land-use
change for feed production are taken into account. An analysis by
the Washington, D.C.-based think tank World Resources Institute
shows that in 2011, China generated more agriculture-related
emissions than any other nation.
Jiang Gaoming, one of the study's authors and a professor at the
Chinese Academy of Sciences' Institute of Botany, said that using
organic manure can significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions
from crop production. If the country completely replaces chemical
fertilizer with organic manure, "the [mitigation] potential should
be 1.38 billion tons of carbon dioxide for the whole China's
farmland per year," Jiang said.
However, there are barriers to making such a switch. For one,
according to Jiang, farms in China are reluctant to use organic
fertilizer as this requires more labor, and labor costs have
increased greatly in recent years. In addition, the country may not
be able to find enough organic fertilizer to use if all the
farmlands are replaced with organic fertilizer, Jiang said.
Jiang and his team suggested that the Chinese government could
encourage farmers to use half the amount of chemical fertilizer
while the rest is replaced with organic ones. "A combination of
organic manure and chemical fertilizer demonstrated the best result
in improving soil quality and crop yields, while decreasing
greenhouse gas emissions," the scientists said.
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