The cost of agriculturally based greenhouse gas offsets in the Texas High Plains

The broad objective of this thesis involves investigation of the role agriculture might play in a society wide greenhouse gas emissions reduction effort. Specifically, the breakeven price for carbon emission offsets is calculated for agriculturally based emission reducing practices. The practices in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chandrasena, Rajapakshage Inoka Ilmi
Other Authors: McCarl, Bruce A.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/85
id ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-85
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-852013-01-08T10:37:11ZThe cost of agriculturally based greenhouse gas offsets in the Texas High PlainsChandrasena, Rajapakshage Inoka IlmiAgriculturally based greenhouse gas offsetsBreakeven carbon priceProducer development costTexas High PlainsCarbon sequestrationThe broad objective of this thesis involves investigation of the role agriculture might play in a society wide greenhouse gas emissions reduction effort. Specifically, the breakeven price for carbon emission offsets is calculated for agriculturally based emission reducing practices. The practices investigated in the Texas High Plains involve reduced tillage use, reduced fallow use, reduced crop fertilization, cropland conversion to grassland, feedlot enteric fermentation management and digester based dairy manure handling. Costs of emission reductions were calculated at the producer level. The calculated offset prices are classified into four cost categories. They are: negative cost, low cost (less than $20 per ton of carbon saved), moderate cost ($20 through $100 per ton of carbon saved), and high cost (over $100 for tons of carbon saved). Negative cost implies that farmers could make money and reduce emissions by moving to alternative practices even without any carbon payments. Alternatives in the positive cost categories need compensation to induce farmers to switch to practices that sequester more carbon. All fallow dryland crop practices, dryland and irrigated cotton zero tillage, dryland and irrigated wheat zero tillage, irrigated corn zero tillage, cotton irrigated nitrogen use reduction under minimum tillage and dryland pasture for all systems, and anaerobic lagoon complete mix and plug flow systems fall in the negative cost category. Dryland and irrigated wheat under minimum tillage are found to be in the low cost category. Cotton dryland under minimum tillage and cotton irrigated with nitrogen use reduction under zero tillage fell into the moderate cost class. Both corn and cotton irrigated minimum tillage are found to be in the high cost category. This study only considers the producer foregone net income less fixed costs as the only cost incurred in switching to an alternative sequestering practice. More costs such as learning and risk should probably be included. This limitation along with other constraints such as use of short run budget data, lack of availability and reliability of local budgets, overlooking any market effects, and lack of treatment of costs incurred in selling carbon offsets to buyers are limitations and portend future work.Texas A&M UniversityMcCarl, Bruce A.2004-09-30T01:41:49Z2004-09-30T01:41:49Z2003-122004-09-30T01:41:49ZElectronic Thesistext361583 bytes161712 byteselectronicapplication/pdftext/plainborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/85en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Agriculturally based greenhouse gas offsets
Breakeven carbon price
Producer development cost
Texas High Plains
Carbon sequestration
spellingShingle Agriculturally based greenhouse gas offsets
Breakeven carbon price
Producer development cost
Texas High Plains
Carbon sequestration
Chandrasena, Rajapakshage Inoka Ilmi
The cost of agriculturally based greenhouse gas offsets in the Texas High Plains
description The broad objective of this thesis involves investigation of the role agriculture might play in a society wide greenhouse gas emissions reduction effort. Specifically, the breakeven price for carbon emission offsets is calculated for agriculturally based emission reducing practices. The practices investigated in the Texas High Plains involve reduced tillage use, reduced fallow use, reduced crop fertilization, cropland conversion to grassland, feedlot enteric fermentation management and digester based dairy manure handling. Costs of emission reductions were calculated at the producer level. The calculated offset prices are classified into four cost categories. They are: negative cost, low cost (less than $20 per ton of carbon saved), moderate cost ($20 through $100 per ton of carbon saved), and high cost (over $100 for tons of carbon saved). Negative cost implies that farmers could make money and reduce emissions by moving to alternative practices even without any carbon payments. Alternatives in the positive cost categories need compensation to induce farmers to switch to practices that sequester more carbon. All fallow dryland crop practices, dryland and irrigated cotton zero tillage, dryland and irrigated wheat zero tillage, irrigated corn zero tillage, cotton irrigated nitrogen use reduction under minimum tillage and dryland pasture for all systems, and anaerobic lagoon complete mix and plug flow systems fall in the negative cost category. Dryland and irrigated wheat under minimum tillage are found to be in the low cost category. Cotton dryland under minimum tillage and cotton irrigated with nitrogen use reduction under zero tillage fell into the moderate cost class. Both corn and cotton irrigated minimum tillage are found to be in the high cost category. This study only considers the producer foregone net income less fixed costs as the only cost incurred in switching to an alternative sequestering practice. More costs such as learning and risk should probably be included. This limitation along with other constraints such as use of short run budget data, lack of availability and reliability of local budgets, overlooking any market effects, and lack of treatment of costs incurred in selling carbon offsets to buyers are limitations and portend future work.
author2 McCarl, Bruce A.
author_facet McCarl, Bruce A.
Chandrasena, Rajapakshage Inoka Ilmi
author Chandrasena, Rajapakshage Inoka Ilmi
author_sort Chandrasena, Rajapakshage Inoka Ilmi
title The cost of agriculturally based greenhouse gas offsets in the Texas High Plains
title_short The cost of agriculturally based greenhouse gas offsets in the Texas High Plains
title_full The cost of agriculturally based greenhouse gas offsets in the Texas High Plains
title_fullStr The cost of agriculturally based greenhouse gas offsets in the Texas High Plains
title_full_unstemmed The cost of agriculturally based greenhouse gas offsets in the Texas High Plains
title_sort cost of agriculturally based greenhouse gas offsets in the texas high plains
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/85
work_keys_str_mv AT chandrasenarajapakshageinokailmi thecostofagriculturallybasedgreenhousegasoffsetsinthetexashighplains
AT chandrasenarajapakshageinokailmi costofagriculturallybasedgreenhousegasoffsetsinthetexashighplains
_version_ 1716503063927193600