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Farmer perspectives on carbon markets incentivizing agricultural soil carbon sequestration

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Farmer perspectives on carbon markets incentivizing agricultural soil carbon sequestration

C. T. Barbato and A. L. Strong

Discover the intriguing insights from Clare T. Barbato and Aaron L. Strong as they explore why U.S. farmers engage in soil carbon offset programs. Their study reveals that economic profitability and soil health drive farmers more than carbon credit incentives. Join in as they unveil the complexities and challenges farmers face in navigating carbon markets!

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Climate change mitigation efforts to achieve net-zero emissions require not only decreasing current greenhouse gas emissions, but also the deployment of negative emissions technologies. Soil organic carbon sequestration in agricultural lands is one such negative emissions strategy, currently being incentivized predominantly through voluntary carbon offset markets. Through semi-structured interviews, we assess both conventional and organic farmer perspectives on soil carbon offset programs that have been created in the United States since 2017. The perspectives of farmers both participating and not participating in agricultural soil carbon markets were similar and consistent. Farmers in both groups expressed concerns about the convoluted, burdensome and unpredictable nature of receiving offset credits and emphasized that they were implementing practices for their own business interests and sustainability concerns, not the financial incentive of the generation of carbon credits. Based on our research, carbon offset credit payments for agricultural soil carbon sequestration are largely reaching farmers who were already implementing these beneficial practices or were already strongly interested in implementing these practices, and the payments for the offset credits are seen as a 'gravy on top', suggesting that these offset markets face strong challenges of ensuring true additionality essential to effective climate mitigation.
Publisher
npj Climate Action
Published On
Sep 25, 2023
Authors
Clare T. Barbato, Aaron L. Strong
Tags
soil carbon offset
farmers perspectives
carbon credits
economic profitability
soil health
carbon markets
additionality
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