| Literature DB >> 30093833 |
Thomas Fellmann1, Peter Witzke2, Franz Weiss3, Benjamin Van Doorslaer1, Dusan Drabik4, Ingo Huck1, Guna Salputra1, Torbjörn Jansson5, Adrian Leip3.
Abstract
Taking the European Union (EU) as a case study, we simulate the application of non-uniform national mitigation targets to achieve a sectoral reduction in agricultural non-carbon dioxide (CO2) greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Scenario results show substantial impacts on EU agricultural production, in particular, the livestock sector. Significant increases in imports and decreases in exports result in rather moderate domestic consumption impacts but induce production increases in non-EU countries that are associated with considerable emission leakage effects. The results underline four major challenges for the general integration of agriculture into national and global climate change mitigation policy frameworks and strategies, as they strengthen requests for (1) a targeted but flexible implementation of mitigation obligations at national and global level and (2) the need for a wider consideration of technological mitigation options. The results also indicate that a globally effective reduction in agricultural emissions requires (3) multilateral commitments for agriculture to limit emission leakage and may have to (4) consider options that tackle the reduction in GHG emissions from the consumption side.Entities:
Keywords: Agriculture; Climate change; Emissions; Mitigation; Policy
Year: 2017 PMID: 30093833 PMCID: PMC6054014 DOI: 10.1007/s11027-017-9743-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mitig Adapt Strateg Glob Chang ISSN: 1381-2386 Impact factor: 3.583
Fig. 1Share in global agriculture GHG emissions (%, 2012). Source: FAO (2016)
Fig. 2Share of agriculture in total national GHG emissions (%). The left panel depicts the countries with a share of at least 1.0% in global agriculture GHG emissions (cf. Fig. 1). Source: Own compilation based on data of Richards et al. (2015)
GHG emission reduction target for agriculture in the EU member states in 2030 compared to 2005, as assumed in the HET28 scenario
| Member state(EU-15)a | Agricultural emission target | Member state(EU-N12)b | Agricultural emission target |
|---|---|---|---|
| Austria | −35 | Bulgaria | +1 |
| Belgium-Lux. | −34 | Cyprus | −24 |
| Denmark | −39 | Czech Republic | −10 |
| Finland | −35 | Estonia | −8 |
| France | −33 | Hungary | −9 |
| Germany | −33 | Latvia | −2 |
| Greece | −23 | Lithuania | −4 |
| Ireland | −39 | Malta | −14 |
| Italy | −32 | Poland | −5 |
| Netherlands | −35 | Romania | 0 |
| Portugal | −18 | Slovak Republic | −6 |
| Spain | −29 | Slovenia | −15 |
| Sweden | −36 | ||
| UK | -35 | EU | −28 |
The member state targets are based on the current EU Effort Sharing Decision (European Council 2009), increased according to a linear modification (ESD −19%) such that a 28% reduction in total EU agricultural non-CO2 emissions is achieved
aEU-15: 15 EU member states before 2004
bEU-N12: 12 EU member states of the 2004 and 2007 enlargements (Croatia has not been included in the analysis)
Fig. 3CAPRI model structure and implementation of the mitigation policy scenario. Source: Adjusted from Pérez Domínguez and Fellmann (2015)
Fig. 4Percentage changes in agriculture GHG emissions per EU member state (2030). The year 2005 is an ex-post simulation close to the historical 2005 data. EU-15: 15 EU member states before 2004 and EU-N12: 12 EU member states of the 2004 and 2007 enlargements
Fig. 5Percentage change in EU area, herd size and supply in the HET28 scenario compared to REF (2030). Supply is not applicable for the aggregates of utilized agricultural area and other arable crops
Fig. 6Percentage change in EU producer and consumer prices in the HET28 scenario compared to REF (2030). The consumer price is not applicable for the milk aggregates, whereas the producer price is not applicable for dairy products (butter, cheese)
Fig. 7EU trade balance in the REF and HET28 scenarios (2030). Trade balance = exports − imports
Fig. 8Percentage change in EU consumption in the HET28 scenario compared to REF (2030)