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Greenhouse gas mitigation in Chinese agriculture: Distinguishing technical and economic potentials

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Date
2014-05
Dewey
Economie de la terre et des ressources naturelles
Sujet
China; Agriculture; Climate change; Greenhouse gas mitigation; Marginal abatement cost curve (MACC)
JEL code
O.O5.O53; O.O1.O13; Q.Q5.Q56; Q.Q5.Q53; Q.Q5.Q54
Journal issue
Global Environmental Change
Volume
26
Publication date
05-2014
Article pages
53–62
Publisher
Elsevier
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2014.03.008
URI
https://basepub.dauphine.fr/handle/123456789/13362
Collections
  • LEDa : Publications
Metadata
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Author
De Perthuis, Christian
status unknown
Moran, Dominic
267244 Autre
Lin, Erda
267244 Autre
Han, Guodong
267244 Autre
Guo, Liping
267244 Autre
Ju, Xiaotang
267244 Autre
Saetnan, Eli
status unknown
Smith, Pete
status unknown
Nayak, Dali Rani
status unknown
Koslowski, Frank
267244 Autre
Wang, Wen
261256 Climate Economics Chair
Type
Article accepté pour publication ou publié
Abstract (EN)
China is now the world's biggest annual emitter of greenhouse gases with 7467 million tons (Mt) carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) in 2005, with agriculture accounting for 11% of this total. As elsewhere, agricultural emissions mitigation policy in China faces a range of challenges due to the biophysical complexity and heterogeneity of farming systems, as well as other socioeconomic barriers. Existing research has contributed to improving our understanding of the technical potential of mitigation measures in this sector (i.e. what works). But for policy purposes it is important to convert these measures into a feasible economic potential, which provides a perspective on whether agricultural emissions reduction (measures) are low cost relative to mitigation measures and overall potential offered by other sectors of the economy. We develop a bottom-up marginal abatement cost curve (MACC) representing the cost of mitigation measures applicable in addition to business-as-usual agricultural practices. The MACC results demonstrate that while the sector offers a maximum technical potential of 402 MtCO2e in 2020, a reduction of 135 MtCO2e is potentially available at zero or negative cost (i.e. a cost saving), and 176 MtCO2e (approximately 44% of the total) can be abated at a cost below a threshold carbon price ≤¥ 100 (approximately €12) per tCO2e. Our findings highlight the relative cost effectiveness of nitrogen fertilizer and manure best management practices, and animal breeding practices. We outline the assumptions underlying MACC construction and discuss some scientific, socioeconomic and institutional barriers to realizing the indicated levels of mitigation.

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