Advancing national greenhouse gas inventories for agriculture in developing countries: Improving activity data, emission factors and software technology

Developing countries face many challenges when constructing national inventories of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, such as lack of activity data, insufficient measurements for deriving country-specific emission factors, and a limited basis for assessing GHG mitigation options. Emissions from agricu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ogle, Stephen Michael, Buendia, L., Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus, Breidt, F.J., Hartman, M., Yagi, K., Nayamuth, R., Spencer, S., Wirth, T., Smith, Pete
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: IOP Publishing 2013
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/33988
_version_ 1855527677113401344
author Ogle, Stephen Michael
Buendia, L.
Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus
Breidt, F.J.
Hartman, M.
Yagi, K.
Nayamuth, R.
Spencer, S.
Wirth, T.
Smith, Pete
author_browse Breidt, F.J.
Buendia, L.
Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus
Hartman, M.
Nayamuth, R.
Ogle, Stephen Michael
Smith, Pete
Spencer, S.
Wirth, T.
Yagi, K.
author_facet Ogle, Stephen Michael
Buendia, L.
Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus
Breidt, F.J.
Hartman, M.
Yagi, K.
Nayamuth, R.
Spencer, S.
Wirth, T.
Smith, Pete
author_sort Ogle, Stephen Michael
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Developing countries face many challenges when constructing national inventories of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, such as lack of activity data, insufficient measurements for deriving country-specific emission factors, and a limited basis for assessing GHG mitigation options. Emissions from agricultural production are often significant sources in developing countries, particularly soil nitrous oxide, and livestock enteric and manure methane, in addition to wetland rice methane. Consequently, estimating GHG emissions from agriculture is an important part of constructing developing country inventories. While the challenges may seem insurmountable, there are ways forward such as: (a) efficiently using resources to compile activity data by combining censuses and surveys; (b) using a tiered approach to measure emissions at appropriately selected sites, coupled with modeling to derive country-specific emission factors; and (c) using advanced software systems to guide compilers through the inventory process. With a concerted effort by compilers and assistance through capacity-building efforts, developing country compilers could produce transparent, accurate, complete, consistent and comparable inventories, as recommended by the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change). In turn, the resulting inventories would provide the foundation for robust GHG mitigation analyses and allow for the development of nationally appropriate mitigation actions and low emission development strategies.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace33988
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2013
publishDateRange 2013
publishDateSort 2013
publisher IOP Publishing
publisherStr IOP Publishing
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace339882025-11-12T04:28:03Z Advancing national greenhouse gas inventories for agriculture in developing countries: Improving activity data, emission factors and software technology Ogle, Stephen Michael Buendia, L. Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus Breidt, F.J. Hartman, M. Yagi, K. Nayamuth, R. Spencer, S. Wirth, T. Smith, Pete Developing countries face many challenges when constructing national inventories of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, such as lack of activity data, insufficient measurements for deriving country-specific emission factors, and a limited basis for assessing GHG mitigation options. Emissions from agricultural production are often significant sources in developing countries, particularly soil nitrous oxide, and livestock enteric and manure methane, in addition to wetland rice methane. Consequently, estimating GHG emissions from agriculture is an important part of constructing developing country inventories. While the challenges may seem insurmountable, there are ways forward such as: (a) efficiently using resources to compile activity data by combining censuses and surveys; (b) using a tiered approach to measure emissions at appropriately selected sites, coupled with modeling to derive country-specific emission factors; and (c) using advanced software systems to guide compilers through the inventory process. With a concerted effort by compilers and assistance through capacity-building efforts, developing country compilers could produce transparent, accurate, complete, consistent and comparable inventories, as recommended by the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change). In turn, the resulting inventories would provide the foundation for robust GHG mitigation analyses and allow for the development of nationally appropriate mitigation actions and low emission development strategies. 2013-03-01 2013-11-08T09:54:07Z 2013-11-08T09:54:07Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/33988 en Open Access application/pdf IOP Publishing Ogle S.M., Buendia L., Butterbach-Bahl K., Breidt F.J., Hartman M., Yagi K., Nayamuth R., Spencer S., Wirth T., Smith P., 2013, Advancing national greenhouse gas inventories for agriculture in developing countries: improving activity data, emission factors and software technology. Environmental Research Letters 8(1) 015030 (8pp),
spellingShingle Ogle, Stephen Michael
Buendia, L.
Butterbach-Bahl, Klaus
Breidt, F.J.
Hartman, M.
Yagi, K.
Nayamuth, R.
Spencer, S.
Wirth, T.
Smith, Pete
Advancing national greenhouse gas inventories for agriculture in developing countries: Improving activity data, emission factors and software technology
title Advancing national greenhouse gas inventories for agriculture in developing countries: Improving activity data, emission factors and software technology
title_full Advancing national greenhouse gas inventories for agriculture in developing countries: Improving activity data, emission factors and software technology
title_fullStr Advancing national greenhouse gas inventories for agriculture in developing countries: Improving activity data, emission factors and software technology
title_full_unstemmed Advancing national greenhouse gas inventories for agriculture in developing countries: Improving activity data, emission factors and software technology
title_short Advancing national greenhouse gas inventories for agriculture in developing countries: Improving activity data, emission factors and software technology
title_sort advancing national greenhouse gas inventories for agriculture in developing countries improving activity data emission factors and software technology
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/33988
work_keys_str_mv AT oglestephenmichael advancingnationalgreenhousegasinventoriesforagricultureindevelopingcountriesimprovingactivitydataemissionfactorsandsoftwaretechnology
AT buendial advancingnationalgreenhousegasinventoriesforagricultureindevelopingcountriesimprovingactivitydataemissionfactorsandsoftwaretechnology
AT butterbachbahlklaus advancingnationalgreenhousegasinventoriesforagricultureindevelopingcountriesimprovingactivitydataemissionfactorsandsoftwaretechnology
AT breidtfj advancingnationalgreenhousegasinventoriesforagricultureindevelopingcountriesimprovingactivitydataemissionfactorsandsoftwaretechnology
AT hartmanm advancingnationalgreenhousegasinventoriesforagricultureindevelopingcountriesimprovingactivitydataemissionfactorsandsoftwaretechnology
AT yagik advancingnationalgreenhousegasinventoriesforagricultureindevelopingcountriesimprovingactivitydataemissionfactorsandsoftwaretechnology
AT nayamuthr advancingnationalgreenhousegasinventoriesforagricultureindevelopingcountriesimprovingactivitydataemissionfactorsandsoftwaretechnology
AT spencers advancingnationalgreenhousegasinventoriesforagricultureindevelopingcountriesimprovingactivitydataemissionfactorsandsoftwaretechnology
AT wirtht advancingnationalgreenhousegasinventoriesforagricultureindevelopingcountriesimprovingactivitydataemissionfactorsandsoftwaretechnology
AT smithpete advancingnationalgreenhousegasinventoriesforagricultureindevelopingcountriesimprovingactivitydataemissionfactorsandsoftwaretechnology