The C sequestration efficiency of soils

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Presentation transcript:

The C sequestration efficiency of soils Pete Smith Professor of Soils & Global Change School of Biological Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Scotland, UK E-mail: pete.smith@abdn.ac.uk CarboEurope-IP Annual Meeting, Poznan, Poland, October 2007

Outline Soils in the global C cycle Mechanisms for soil C sequestration Global potential for soil C sequestration Response of soil C sinks to future climate change Conclusions

Soils in the global C cycle

Mechanisms for soil C sequestration

How does soil C sequestration work? e.g. residue management, organic amendments, increased plant C input… Increase C inputs… e.g. restore & rewet farmed organic soils ...or reduce C losses Organic carbon source CO2 Some C is stabilised in the soil Add to soil Soil C cycle Soil C in soil

How does soil C sequestration work? – reduced disturbance No-till Tillage C Tillage breaks open aggregates C C Organic material (C) more exposed to microbial attack and weathering Key: C = C inside aggregate = weathering = microbe

Mechanisms for soil C sequestration in agriculture Smith et al. (2007a)

Global potential for soil C sequestration

Method Database of over 200 experiments to derive per-area / per-animal mitigation efficiencies for >60 agricultural mitigation options, for four climate zones Mean estimates and low and high 95% CI values derived from mixed effects modelling Applied to appropriate agricultural (crop, grass, livestock) areas / numbers in each climate zone in each region Smith et al. (2007a)

Ogle et al. (2003)

Soil C sequestration rates for cool dry climate Data from: Smith et al. (2007a)

Soil C sequestration rates in different climates Cool Warm Dry Moist Data from: Smith et al. (2007a)

Soil C emission reduction rates for organic soil restoration Data from: Smith et al. (2007a)

Organic soil restoration vs. mineral soil sequestration Data from: Smith et al. (2007a)

IPCC AR4 Agricultural GHG Mitigation FAO AEZ Database (e.g. showing regions)

Global mitigation potential in agriculture Smith et al. (2007a)

Regional breakdown of mitigation potential Smith et al. (2007a)

High and low estimates of the mitigation potential in each region Smith et al. (2007a)

Effect of C price on implementation Smith et al. (2007a)

Global economic mitigation potential for different sectors at different carbon prices IPCC WGIII (2007)

Response of soil C sinks to future climate change

Uncertainty in cropland & grassland SOC stock changes due to climate, NPP & technology change (HadCM3-A2) Including potential improvements due to technology results in, with the minimum likely effect, a small increase in both arable and grassland systems, and with the maximum likely effect an average increase of over 5 t/ha. Minimum Climate Only Climate & NPP Climate & NPP & Tech Maximum J.U. Smith et al. (2005)

Vulnerability of the Carbon Cycle in the 21st century Uncertainty of the Biospheric-Carbon-Climate Feedback Uncertainty on Anthropogenic Carbon Emissions Up to 250 ppm Up to 200 ppm IPCC SRES 2000; Friedlingstein et al. 2006 Slide courtesy of Pep Canadell, GCP

Conclusions Soil C sequestration is a globally significant climate mitigation measure Soil C sequestration is cost competitive with climate mitigation measures in other sectors Soil C sequestration is not permanent and is of limited duration (due to sink saturation) Response of soil C sinks to future climate change remains uncertain

Thank you for your attention