4.8 Article

Soil carbon sequestration in global working lands as a gateway for negative emission technologies

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.16884

Keywords

agroforestry; climate change; cover crops; regenerative agriculture; soil amendments; soil carbon sequestration; no-till

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The ongoing climate crisis requires urgent development of management approaches and technologies to reduce atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations. Soil carbon sequestration provides a low-cost means of removing CO2 from the atmosphere, but its implementation rate is currently too slow to make significant progress toward global emissions goals by 2050.
The ongoing climate crisis merits an urgent need to devise management approaches and new technologies to reduce atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations (GHG) in the near term. However, each year that GHG concentrations continue to rise, pressure mounts to develop and deploy atmospheric CO2 removal pathways as a complement to, and not replacement for, emissions reductions. Soil carbon sequestration (SCS) practices in working lands provide a low-tech and cost-effective means for removing CO2 from the atmosphere while also delivering co-benefits to people and ecosystems. Our model estimates suggest that, assuming additive effects, the technical potential of combined SCS practices can provide 30%-70% of the carbon removal required by the Paris Climate Agreement if applied to 25%-50% of the available global land area, respectively. Atmospheric CO2 drawdown via SCS has the potential to last decades to centuries, although more research is needed to determine the long-term viability at scale and the durability of the carbon stored. Regardless of these research needs, we argue that SCS can at least serve as a bridging technology, reducing atmospheric CO2 in the short term while energy and transportation systems adapt to a low-C economy. Soil C sequestration in working lands holds promise as a climate change mitigation tool, but the current rate of implementation remains too slow to make significant progress toward global emissions goals by 2050. Outreach and education, methodology development for C offset registries, improved access to materials and supplies, and improved research networks are needed to accelerate the rate of SCS practice implementation. Herein, we present an argument for the immediate adoption of SCS practices in working lands and recommendations for improved implementation.

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