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Agriculture and Kyoto - an Update
By Terry Daynard, OCPA Executive Vice-President
The Agriculture Table is also looking at means to reduce fossil fuel
usage, increase annual crop photosynthesis, increase perennial forage production (forages transfer more organic
matter to roots than annual crops), increase the use of renewable fuels (making up, perhaps, for the lack of attention
by the Transportation Table), and soil carbon sequestration (an overlapping area of interest with the Sink Table
– see below).
Soil Carbon Sequestration
The Sink Table has been hampered by the fact that agricultural
soil carbon sequestration was not part of the original Kyoto agreement. Canadian officials led by AAFC, with some
support from Environment Canada, have been trying to correct this oversight. They’ve had limited success. The U.S.
has provided good support lately, although this was not initially the case, but the Europeans, who are not into
reduced tillage like North American farmers – and who see this as a ploy to give Canada and the U.S. an advantage
– have been opposed. Countries have the right to include any activities which reduce/eliminate net carbon dioxide
emissions from soils, but the opportunities are limited in Canada because organic matter levels in most Canadian
soils are now believed to be at equilibrium after years of decline. Although forestry is recognized as a sink,
most Canadian forests are excluded due to the way the agreement is written; the Kyoto emphasis is on reforestation
or afforestation of lands not now growing trees. And the opportunities here for substantial sequestration are limited.
Another difficulty for agricultural soils is the paucity of research data from long-term tests – comparing conventional
and no tillage for example – and the uncertainty of predictions about the potential for gains on various soil types.
But there is optimism that agricultural soil sequestration will eventually be part of any long-term international
agreement for reductions in net greenhouse gas emissions. Plans are being made accordingly.
The most exciting of these plans, from an Ontario perspective, involves reduced tillage. Reduced (no) tillage offers
opportunities to increase soil organic matter and improve crop productivity, reduce soil erosion and save fuel
and money.
According to current Sink Table calculations, soil carbon sequestration could be equivalent to about 20 million
tonnes of carbon dioxide per year by about 2010, or about 22 per cent of present Canadian agriculture net emissions
(see above). Soil sequestration associated with no tillage, alone, could be sufficient for Canadian agriculture
to meet and surpass the Kyoto commitment – provided, of course, agricultural soil carbon sequestration is part
of the deal.
Kyoto activities may represent a means of securing money for needed research on reduced tillage – just as is already
occurring in Western Canada. How, for example, can we get corn to respond as well to no tillage as soybeans and
winter wheat?
There is also interest in some quarters in opportunities for farmers to sell “carbon credits” associated with no
tillage, though I personally am not enthusiastic about this since the amount of money is not likely to be large,
and it may come with a lot of bureaucratic rules and procedures. And what happens if farmers are forced to till
their ground for some reason, or can’t get it planted? Will the credits need to be repaid?
Nevertheless, if carbon credit trading becomes a reality and money changes hands as a result, farmers should have
their opportunity to be on the receiving end. The downside is that a carbon credit trading regime may mean other
farmers could have to pay for credits – for example, for expansion of livestock or fossil fuel consuming initiatives.
Canadian Strategy
The Government of Canada committed $150 million for Kyoto operations.
Much is being used in funding the tables and for paying the myriad consultants which they have hired. But some
of the money is available for “early action” initiatives. For example, Kyoto funds were used to help fund the Iogen
ethanol-from-cellulose pilot plant at Ottawa, a $25-million venture ($10 million from Ottawa) designed to make
ethanol from materials like corn stover. (Apparently Iogen has also contracted for the production of about 200
acres of switchgrass this summer, as feedstock for ethanol production. That should be interesting.)
Agriculture and food (including ethanol and sink activities) will likely be a small part of any future Canadian
Kyoto strategy. The big issue is fossil fuel usage for transportation and other purposes. The debate in this area
rages around higher taxes (the environmentalists’ first choice) or other approaches involving superior technology
(fuel cells, for example). But agriculture will be a player, and there are good opportunities for these to be exploited
in concert with other improvements which we should do anyway (better manure and fertilizer management, greater
energy efficiency, no tillage, fuel ethanol, as examples).
The greenhouse gas debate will likely heat up (pun intended) later this fall or next year when the Canadian government
announces its strategy...likely to a chorus of environmentalists’ screaming “Not enough!” and energy companies
predicting excessive hardships for us all. Stay tuned.
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