Soil carbon sequestration (SCS) is a key priority in the Australian government’s Long-Term Emissions Reduction Plan. Under the government’s Emission Reduction Fund (ERF), farmers are encouraged to change to a management practice that will increase their soil carbon (C) stock and earn Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCUs). The projections of net C abatement nationally range from 17 to 103 Mt carbon dioxide equivalent annually up to 2050. This huge range reflects the uncertainties in achieving net SCS due to biophysical constraints, such as those imposed by the paucity and variability of Australian rainfall and the difficulty of measuring small changes in soil C stock. The uptake by farmers is also uncertain because of compliance costs, oppo...
The land sector is essential to achieve the Paris Agreement’s goals. Agriculture and land use contri...
To limit warming to well below 2°C, most scenario projections rely on greenhouse gas removal technol...
Soil organic carbon (C) sequestration rates based on the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change ...
Application of organic amendments such as livestock manures and compost is commonly listed amongst s...
The clearing of farming land over the last four hundred years has released large quantities of carbo...
Soil carbon sequestration (SCS) is the transferral of atmospheric carbon dioxide into the soil. The ...
Concerns about increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, primarily carbon dio...
Restorative land management has potential to remove atmospheric carbon dioxide and store carbon in s...
The Australian government has identified soil carbon sequestration on agricultural lands as a potent...
Increasing soil organic carbon (SOC) has potential to offset greenhouse gas emissions, but the scope...
© 2020 Adelina LawrenceThe potential of soil carbon sequestration (SCS) as a method to reduce greenh...
Not AvailableWorld soils have been a source of atmospheric carbon dioxide since the dawn of settled ...
The term 'carbon sequestration' is commonly used to describe any increase in soil organic carbon (SO...
Carbon sequestration is vital for mitigating climate change by reducing atmospheric carbon dioxide (...
With agriculture occupying approximately sixty per cent of Australia’s land surface, policy makers, ...
The land sector is essential to achieve the Paris Agreement’s goals. Agriculture and land use contri...
To limit warming to well below 2°C, most scenario projections rely on greenhouse gas removal technol...
Soil organic carbon (C) sequestration rates based on the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change ...
Application of organic amendments such as livestock manures and compost is commonly listed amongst s...
The clearing of farming land over the last four hundred years has released large quantities of carbo...
Soil carbon sequestration (SCS) is the transferral of atmospheric carbon dioxide into the soil. The ...
Concerns about increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, primarily carbon dio...
Restorative land management has potential to remove atmospheric carbon dioxide and store carbon in s...
The Australian government has identified soil carbon sequestration on agricultural lands as a potent...
Increasing soil organic carbon (SOC) has potential to offset greenhouse gas emissions, but the scope...
© 2020 Adelina LawrenceThe potential of soil carbon sequestration (SCS) as a method to reduce greenh...
Not AvailableWorld soils have been a source of atmospheric carbon dioxide since the dawn of settled ...
The term 'carbon sequestration' is commonly used to describe any increase in soil organic carbon (SO...
Carbon sequestration is vital for mitigating climate change by reducing atmospheric carbon dioxide (...
With agriculture occupying approximately sixty per cent of Australia’s land surface, policy makers, ...
The land sector is essential to achieve the Paris Agreement’s goals. Agriculture and land use contri...
To limit warming to well below 2°C, most scenario projections rely on greenhouse gas removal technol...
Soil organic carbon (C) sequestration rates based on the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change ...