U.S. agriculture's role in a greenhouse gas emission mitigation world: An economic perspective
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Date
2000
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
East Lansing, Mich.: Michigan State University. Dept. of Agricultural Economics
Abstract
This paper assesses the role of agriculture as potential source or sink for greenhouse gasses. The authors evaluate the impacts of international mitigation agreements on the agricultural sector. They discuss emission trading markets, the marginal cost of agricultural carbon sequestration versus non-agricultural abatement options, and the long term outlook for agricultures role. They suggest that the benefits of agricultural mitigation strategies may decrease over time as other industries develop low-cost technology for reducing emissions.
Description
Keywords
Carbon sequestration, Air purification, World markets, Economic policy, Biomass energy, Afforestation, Government policy, Land tenure, Markets, Economic impacts, Pollution control, Trade policy, Agriculture, Agricultural sinks, Emissions trading, Greenhouse gas emission reductions, Kyoto Protocol, Property rights, Carbon dioxide (CO2), Methane, Nitrous oxide, Ecosystem Farm/Enterprise Scale Governance
Citation
Review of Agricultural Economics 22(1): 134-159