4.8 Article

Land-based climate solutions for the United States

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 16, Pages 4912-4919

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.16267

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center [DE-SC0018409]
  2. U.S. National Science Foundation Long-term Ecological Research Program [DEB1832042]
  3. USDA Long-term Agroecosystem Research Program
  4. Michgan State University AgBioResearch
  5. U.S. Department of Energy Advanced Research Projects Agency Energy Program [DE-AR0000826]
  6. European Union [774378, NE/P019455/1]
  7. H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [774378] Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme

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Aggressive action on multiple fronts is necessary to achieve end-of-century global warming targets. This study highlights the benefits of combining nature-based solutions and cellulosic bioenergy for addressing mitigation goals. Nature-based solutions are limited by carbon accrual duration, while bioenergy solutions carry environmental risks. The study shows that a combined approach has a greater mitigation capacity compared to prioritizing nature-based or bioenergy solutions separately.
Meeting end-of-century global warming targets requires aggressive action on multiple fronts. Recent reports note the futility of addressing mitigation goals without fully engaging the agricultural sector, yet no available assessments combine both nature-based solutions (reforestation, grassland and wetland protection, and agricultural practice change) and cellulosic bioenergy for a single geographic region. Collectively, these solutions might offer a suite of climate, biodiversity, and other benefits greater than either alone. Nature-based solutions are largely constrained by the duration of carbon accrual in soils and forest biomass; each of these carbon pools will eventually saturate. Bioenergy solutions can last indefinitely but carry significant environmental risk if carelessly deployed. We detail a simplified scenario for the United States that illustrates the benefits of combining approaches. We assign a portion of non-forested former cropland to bioenergy sufficient to meet projected mid-century transportation needs, with the remainder assigned to nature-based solutions such as reforestation. Bottom-up mitigation potentials for the aggregate contributions of crop, grazing, forest, and bioenergy lands are assessed by including in a Monte Carlo model conservative ranges for cost-effective local mitigation capacities, together with ranges for (a) areal extents that avoid double counting and include realistic adoption rates and (b) the projected duration of different carbon sinks. The projected duration illustrates the net effect of eventually saturating soil carbon pools in the case of most strategies, and additionally saturating biomass carbon pools in the case of forest management. Results show a conservative end-of-century mitigation capacity of 110 (57-178) Gt CO(2)e for the U.S., similar to 50% higher than existing estimates that prioritize nature-based or bioenergy solutions separately. Further research is needed to shrink uncertainties, but there is sufficient confidence in the general magnitude and direction of a combined approach to plan for deployment now.

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