Over the past 40 years, while global nitrous oxide emissions have increased 30%, China’s have increased 286%, the researchers found; however, that increase occurred while animal protein production in the country increased roughly 800%, suggesting that science-led policies and farm management choices can help to increase food production while mitigating greenhouse gas emissions.
In their paper, the researchers explored which drivers helped reduce nitrous oxide emissions in China and what policies could support future mitigation efforts. At the national scale, the most effective climate-mitigation strategy was adoption of anaerobic digesters – technology that converts livestock manure into electricity while reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The most cost-effective strategy was adoption of animal feed that is lower in protein.
The researchers suggest that the greatest potential for future reduction in greenhouse gases would come from a combination of anaerobic digestion and composting on farms; these management strategies would require good planning, policy guidance and financial support from the Chinese government.
“The bad news is that greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise, including nitrous oxide,” Houlton said. “But it would be even worse without the substantial mitigation efforts in China, which have improved agricultural efficiencies while starting to decouple production from emissions. Policy incentives that promote the adoption of circular systems in agriculture, including anaerobic digesters, will be key to building on the gains we have seen and could eventually even reverse emissions.”
This research – led by Yi Zheng, professor and associate dean at Southern University of Science and Technology’s School of Environmental Science and Engineering – was supported by the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the California Strategic Growth Council Climate Change Research Program and the U.S. Department of Energy.
Source : cornell.edu