How soil carbon accounting can improve to support investment- oriented actions promoting soil carbon storage

Key messages ◼ The financial community needs a standardized, low-cost, fit-for-purpose approach to soil organic carbon (SOC) accounting that encourages investment and adapts to the climate market. ◼ To encourage investments, an accounting system should provide “value for money,” align with global...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Costa, Ciniro, Dittmer, Kyle M., Shelton, Sadie W., Bossio, Deborah A., Zinyengere, Nkulumo, Luu, Paul, Heinz, Sebastian, Egenolf, Konrad, Rowland, Bailey, Zuluaga, Andrés, Klemme, Julia, Mealey, Tim, Smith, Madelyn, Wollenberg, Eva Karoline
Formato: Brief
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110284
Descripción
Sumario:Key messages ◼ The financial community needs a standardized, low-cost, fit-for-purpose approach to soil organic carbon (SOC) accounting that encourages investment and adapts to the climate market. ◼ To encourage investments, an accounting system should provide “value for money,” align with global goals and support co-benefits, while safeguarding reputational risks. ◼ Building a sequenced approach to improve accounting accuracy requires planning to reduce uncertainties of the accounting systems overtime. ◼ Developing low-cost SOC accounting requires i) focusing on a few high-quality direct measurements (opposed to multiple low-quality measurements), ii) reducing the uncertainty of models, and iii) enhancing capability to easily incorporate farm-level activity data. ◼ Moving to hybrid measurement approaches (a mix of direct measurements with modeling and remote sensing) seems to be the most cost-effective pathway to achieve low-cost SOC accounting systems.