Soil carbon credits have potential but need clear standards – Environmental Defense Fund

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Published: July 26, 2021

Soil carbon contributes meaningfully to climate mitigation and resilience efforts. Scientists estimate that agricultural soils could remove 4-6% of annual U.S. emissions.

Credits for soil carbon sequestration, however, lack comparability and consistency, which has created uncertainty in the marketplace.

In a new report — Agricultural Soil Carbon Credits: Making sense of protocols for carbon sequestration and net greenhouse gas removals — Environmental Defense Fund and the Woodwell Climate Research Center reviewed the 12 published protocols used to generate soil carbon credits through carbon sequestration in croplands.

Key findings:

Soil carbon protocols take different approaches to measuring, reporting and verifying net climate impacts, and to managing the vital issues of additionality, reversal and permanence. This variation makes it difficult to ensure climate benefits have been achieved.
Until these variations can be resolved, paying farmers to sequester soil carbon will remain an uncertain approach to greenhouse gas mitigation but can still deliver important benefits for climate resilience, soil health and water quality.
Soil carbon sequestration can become an important mitigation strategy if there is agreed upon, credible, cost effective and consistent measurement, reporting and verification behind the credits.

Progress toward high-quality soil carbon credits:

Congress can pass the Growing Climate Solutions Act to direct the U.S. Department of Agriculture to set guidelines for high-quality agricultural carbon credits and make it easier for farmers to participate in carbon markets.
Companies can double down on efforts to reduce emissions from their own operations and invest in high-quality carbon credits, such as those that prevent tropical deforestation.
Researchers can advance technology that will make it easier to measure soil carbon levels over time and more cost-effective to verify carbon credits.

admin
adminhttps://agoracarbon.com
A contributing writer for AgoraCarbon, focused on advancing practical climate solutions across agriculture and industry. With a background in global consumer health and sustainability, the work explores carbon markets, regenerative practices, and emerging opportunities for producers. The focus is on how carbon credit systems can support farmers and processors by creating new revenue streams, improving infrastructure, and encouraging better land use practices, including within the industrial hemp sector. Through this work, the goal is to make carbon solutions more accessible, transparent, and impactful for the producers and communities driving sustainable change on the ground.

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