The update ensures the report and USDA’s entity-scale GHG accounting tools continue to reflect the best available science, providing guidance to farmers, ranchers and forest landowners interested in quantifying the GHG benefits of management changes in their operation. The guidance and tools will also help USDA assess the benefits of current and future conservation programs and initiatives.
The 2024 update is the result of four years of work by a team of more than 60 authors, including USDA scientists, university researchers, and experts from nongovernment environmental organizations and research institutions, who have developed consistent metrics for estimating changes in GHG emissions and carbon sequestration for farm, ranch, and forest operations. The updates to the report were reviewed by more than two dozen scientists, other federal agencies, the public, and a panel of interdisciplinary experts to ensure it meets the criteria established by the White House Office of Management and Budget for highly influential scientific assessments (HISA), a designation reserved for the most influential science published by the federal government. The HISA review can be found on OCE’s Peer Review website.
USDA has been a leader in conducting regional and national GHG inventories for decades, and its scientists have a long history of collaborative research with universities to advance the scientific understanding of agriculture’s role in helping to mitigate and adapt to climate change.
The report is available online at www.usda.gov/oce/entity-scale-ghg-methods.
USDA touches the lives of all Americans each day in so many positive ways. Under the Biden-Harris Administration, USDA is transforming America’s food system, with a greater focus on more resilient local and regional food production, fairer markets for all producers, ensuring access to safe, healthy and nutritious food in all communities, building new markets and streams of income for farmers and producers using climate smart food and forestry practices, making historic investments in infrastructure and clean energy capabilities in rural America, and committing to equity across the Department by removing systemic barriers and building a workforce more representative of America.
Source : usda.gov