| Literature DB >> 28663590 |
Dan Zhang1, Jianbo Shen1, Fusuo Zhang1, Yu'e Li2, Weifeng Zhang3.
Abstract
Due to the increasing environmental impact of food production, carbon footprint as an indicator can guide farmland management. This study established a method and estimated the carbon footprint of grain production in China based on life cycle analysis (LCA). The results showed that grain production has a high carbon footprint in 2013, i.e., 4052 kg ce/ha or 0.48 kg ce/kg for maize, 5455 kg ce/ha or 0.75 kg ce/kg for wheat and 11881 kg ce/ha or 1.60 kg ce/kg for rice. These footprints are higher than that of other countries, such as the United States, Canada and India. The most important factors governing carbon emissions were the application of nitrogen fertiliser (8-49%), straw burning (0-70%), energy consumption by machinery (6-40%), energy consumption for irrigation (0-44%) and CH4 emissions from rice paddies (15-73%). The most important carbon sequestration factors included returning of crop straw (41-90%), chemical nitrogen fertiliser application (10-59%) and no-till farming practices (0-10%). Different factors dominated in different crop systems in different regions. To identity site-specific key factors and take countermeasures could significantly lower carbon footprint, e.g., ban straw burning in northeast and south China, stopping continuous flooding irrigation in wheat and rice production system.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28663590 PMCID: PMC5491493 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-04182-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Differences in the production techniques for three main crops across various primary production areas in China.
| Crop | Region | Sample | Nitrogen fertiliser input | Diesel consumption | Electricity consumption for irrigation | Proportion of households applying manure | Proportion of households utilising no-till techniques | Proportion of households practicing straw returning | Proportion of households practicing straw burning |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| kg N2O/ha | kg/ha | kW h/ha | % | % | % | % | |||
| Maize | I 101 | 50 | 253 ± 113 ab | 326 ± 137 ab | 127 ± 470 a | 78 ± 42 c | 12 ± 33 a | 45 ± 48 b | 31 ± 43 c |
| I 103 | 40 | 232 ± 117 ab | 317 ± 144 ab | 159 ± 522 a | 83 ± 38 c | 18 ± 38 ab | 46 ± 48 b | 21 ± 37 c | |
| III 102 | 32 | 208 ± 79 a | 518 ± 153 c | 339 ± 460 ab | 6 ± 25 a | 0 ± 0 a | 41 ± 42 b | 17 ± 31 bc | |
| IV 102 | 703 | 214 ± 101 a | 419 ± 195 bc | 1888 ± 1262 c | 4 ± 20 a | 43 ± 49 b | 78 ± 38 c | 4 ± 15 ab | |
| V 101 | 16 | 328 ± 139 c | 655 ± 210 d | 1495 ± 2105 c | 81 ± 40 c | 0 ± 0 a | 0 ± 0 a | 0 ± 0 a | |
| VI 101 | 128 | 287 ± 118 bc | 668 ± 220 d | 1334 ± 3662 c | 37 ± 48 b | 0 ± 0 a | 37 ± 47 b | 3 ± 17 ab | |
| VI 102 | 85 | 246 ± 87 ab | 500 ± 197 c | 1205 ± 1486 bc | 6 ± 24 a | 21 ± 41 ab | 84 ± 37 c | 2 ± 11 a | |
| VII 101 | 195 | 231 ± 70 ab | 292 ± 168 a | 10 ± 83 a | 14 ± 35 a | 7 ± 26 a | 1 ± 10 a | 28 ± 42 c | |
| Wheat | II 201 | 16 | 180 ± 48 a | 379 ± 304 a | 180 ± 347 a | 19 ± 40 a | 13 ± 34 b | 19 ± 40 a | 81 ± 40 c |
| III 201 | 162 | 209 ± 71 ab | 532 ± 183 b | 14 ± 110 a | 7 ± 25 a | 1 ± 8 a | 82 ± 37 b | 11 ± 31 b | |
| IV 201 | 800 | 254 ± 102 b | 635 ± 230 bc | 3904 ± 3092 b | 10 ± 30 a | 0 ± 0 a | 94 ± 23 b | 2 ± 13 a | |
| VI 201 | 111 | 210 ± 83 ab | 708 ± 222 c | 1267 ± 2046 a | 23 ± 42 a | 0 ± 0 a | 87 ± 33 b | 1 ± 9 a | |
| Rice | I 301 | 30 | 178 ± 44 b | 417 ± 129 b | 0 ± 0 a | 37 ± 49 cd | 0 ± 0 | 89 ± 30 bc | 10 ± 30 ab |
| I 302 | 104 | 185 ± 79 b | 316 ± 203 a | 16 ± 117 a | 32 ± 47 cd | 0 ± 0 | 80 ± 39 bc | 19 ± 39 abc | |
| I 303 | 105 | 188 ± 84 b | 320 ± 202 a | 13 ± 114 a | 24 ± 43 bc | 0 ± 0 | 79 ± 40 bc | 20 ± 40 abc | |
| II 301 | 142 | 154 ± 51 b | 444 ± 181 bc | 138 ± 540 a | 50 ± 50 d | 0 ± 0 | 72 ± 44 b | 31 ± 46 bc | |
| II 302 | 88 | 154 ± 50 b | 515 ± 145 cd | 64 ± 200 a | 25 ± 44 bc | 0 ± 0 | 43 ± 49 a | 56 ± 49 de | |
| II 303 | 91 | 156 ± 54 b | 502 ± 142 bcd | 61 ± 196 a | 20 ± 40 abc | 0 ± 0 | 45 ± 50 a | 57 ± 49 de | |
| III 301 | 206 | 251 ± 108 c | 549 ± 202 d | 300 ± 958 a | 8 ± 27 ab | 0 ± 0 | 87 ± 32 bc | 35 ± 47 cd | |
| IV 301 | 51 | 304 ± 102 d | 586 ± 133 d | 218 ± 545 a | 20 ± 40 abc | 0 ± 0 | 99 ± 0 c | 0 ± 0 a | |
| VII 301 | 85 | 114 ± 35 a | 766 ± 173 e | 2157 ± 1074 b | 1 ± 11 a | 0 ± 0 | 29 ± 45 a | 70 ± 45 e |
Note: Mean ± SD. Different letters indicate significant differences among different regions of the same crop at P < 0.05 (ANOVA). Crop codes: 101 = spring maize; 102 = summer maize; 103 = autumn maize; 201 = winter wheat; 301 = single-crop rice; 302 = double-cropped early rice; 303 = double-cropped late rice. Area codes: I = triple-cropping area in South China, II = double-cropping rice area in South China, III = lower basin of the Yangtze River (paddy–upland rotation area), IV = North China Plain, V = irrigated area in Northwest China; VI = arid area in Northwest China, VII = single crop area in Northeast China.
Figure 1Carbon emission and carbon sequestration components per unit area/yield for the three primary grain crops in China. “Other emission” includes emissions from the upstream production and transport of agricultural inputs (such as chemical fertilisers, agricultural films, pesticides and manure).
Figure 2Distribution of carbon emissions and carbon sequestration among the three main crops in different areas. “Other emission” includes emissions from the upstream production and transport of agricultural inputs (such as chemical fertiliser, agricultural film, pesticides and manure). Crop codes: 101 = spring maize, 102 = summer maize, 103 = autumn maize, 201 = winter wheat, 301 = single-crop rice, 302 = double-cropped early rice, 303 = double-cropped late rice. Area codes: I = triple-cropping area in South China, II = double-cropping rice area in South China, III = lower basin of the Yangtze River (paddy-upland rotation area), IV = the North China Plain, V = irrigated area in Northwest China, VI = arid area in Northwest China, VII = single crop area in Northeast China.
Figure 3A theoretical model of the carbon footprint of crop production[6].
Carbon footprint per unit area and carbon footprint per unit yield from different studies of grain crop production in China.
| Sample size | Yield | Carbon footprint per unit area | Carbon footprint per unit yield | Calculation method | Data source | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| kg | kg ce/ha | kg ce/kg | |||||
| Maize | — | 6791 | 781 | 0.12 | A | National statistics | Cheng |
| 58 | 7000 ± 200 | 2300 ± 100 | 0.33 ± 0.02 | A | Household survey | Yan | |
| 1249 | 8480 | 4052 | 0.48 | B | Household survey | This study | |
| Wheat | — | 5550 | 794 | 0.14 | A | National statistics | Cheng |
| 48 | 4800 ± 200 | 3000 ± 200 | 0.66 ± 0.03 | A | Household survey | Yan | |
| 1089 | 7548 | 5455 | 0.75 | B | Household survey | This study | |
| Rice | — | 6716 | 2472 | 0.37 | A | National statistics | Cheng |
| 17 | 7600 ± 100 | 6000 ± 100 | 0.80 ± 0.02 | A | Household survey | Yan | |
| 902 | 14123 | 11881 | 1.60 | B | Household survey | This study |
Note: “A” indicates the upstream emission+ field emission (no manure), and “B” indicates the upstream emission+ field emission+ straw-burning emission after harvest.
Comparison of carbon emissions from China and other countries.
| Crop | Country | Carbon emissions per unit yield | Contribution of nitrogen fertiliser | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| kg ce/kg | ||||
| Maize | United States | 0.12–0.25 | 45–75% | Snyder |
| China | 0.95 (0.41–0.85) | 40% (32–49%) | This study | |
| Wheat | United States | 0.25–0.35 | 67–75% | Snyder |
| India | 0.12 | 75% | Pathak | |
| Canada | 0.27–0.50 | — | Gan | |
| China | 1.26 (0.21–1.30) | 28% (13–33%) | This study | |
| Rice | India | 1.2–1.5 | <10% | Pathak |
| China | 2.10 (0.72–2.74) | 15% (8–40%) | This study |
Carbon forms in the carbon footprint model.
| Path | Factor | Carbon form | Differences in emission and sequence factors among regions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Emissions from agricultural inputs, production and transportation | Chemical fertiliser (N, P, K) | CO2 | — |
| Manure | N2O, CH4 | — | |
| Pesticide | CO2 | — | |
| Film | CO2 | — | |
| Diesel | CO2 | — | |
| Electricity | CO2 | — | |
| Field emissions of N2O | Nitrogen fertiliser application | N2O | — |
| Manure application | N2O | — | |
| Emission of CH4 from paddy fields | Rice plant and paddy field | CH4 | √ |
| Carbon sequence | Nitrogen fertiliser application | SOC | √ |
| Straw returning | SOC | √ | |
| No-till | SOC | √ | |
| Emission from straw burning | Straw burning | CO2, N2O | — |