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Co‐benefits,trade‐offs,barriers and policies for greenhouse gas mitigation in the agriculture,forestry and other land use (AFOLU) sector
Authors:Mercedes Bustamante  Carmenza Robledo‐Abad  Richard Harper  Cheikh Mbow  Nijavalli H Ravindranat  Frank Sperling  Helmut Haberl  Alexandre de Siqueira Pinto  Pete Smith
Institution:1. Departamento de Ecologia, Universidade de Brasília, I.B. C.P. 04457, Campus Universitário Darcy Ribeiro ‐ UnB. D.F. CEP, , Brasília, 70919‐970 Brazil;2. Department of Environmental Systems Science, USYS TdLab, , Zurich, 8092 Switzerland;3. HELVETAS Swiss Intercooperation, , Bern, CH 3001 Switzerland;4. School of Veterinary and Life Sciences, Murdoch University, , Murdoch, Western Australia, 6150 Australia;5. World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), , Nairobi, Kenya;6. Indian Institute of Science Bangalore, Centre for Sustainable Technologies (CST), , Bangalore, 560 012 India;7. Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Change, African Development Bank, , Tunis Belvedere, B.P. 323 – 1002 Tunisia;8. Institute of Social Ecology Vienna (SEC), Alpen‐Adria Universitaet (AAU), , Vienna, 1070 Austria;9. Integrative Research Institute on Transformations of Human‐Environment Systems (IRI THESys), Humboldt‐Universit?t zu Berlin, , Berlin, D‐10117 Germany;10. Departamento de Ecologia, C.C.B.S., Universidade Federal de Sergipe, , S?o Cristóv?o, Sergipe, CEP 49100‐000 Brazil;11. Institute of Biological & Environmental Sciences, ClimateXChange and Scottish Food Security Alliance‐Crops, University of Aberdeen, , Aberdeen, AB24 3UU Scotland, UK
Abstract:The agriculture, forestry and other land use (AFOLU) sector is responsible for approximately 25% of anthropogenic GHG emissions mainly from deforestation and agricultural emissions from livestock, soil and nutrient management. Mitigation from the sector is thus extremely important in meeting emission reduction targets. The sector offers a variety of cost‐competitive mitigation options with most analyses indicating a decline in emissions largely due to decreasing deforestation rates. Sustainability criteria are needed to guide development and implementation of AFOLU mitigation measures with particular focus on multifunctional systems that allow the delivery of multiple services from land. It is striking that almost all of the positive and negative impacts, opportunities and barriers are context specific, precluding generic statements about which AFOLU mitigation measures have the greatest promise at a global scale. This finding underlines the importance of considering each mitigation strategy on a case‐by‐case basis, systemic effects when implementing mitigation options on the national scale, and suggests that policies need to be flexible enough to allow such assessments. National and international agricultural and forest (climate) policies have the potential to alter the opportunity costs of specific land uses in ways that increase opportunities or barriers for attaining climate change mitigation goals. Policies governing practices in agriculture and in forest conservation and management need to account for both effective mitigation and adaptation and can help to orient practices in agriculture and in forestry towards global sharing of innovative technologies for the efficient use of land resources. Different policy instruments, especially economic incentives and regulatory approaches, are currently being applied however, for its successful implementation it is critical to understand how land‐use decisions are made and how new social, political and economic forces in the future will influence this process.
Keywords:   AFOLU     agriculture  climate  ecosystem service  food security  forestry     GHG     mitigation
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