Volume 21, Issue 7 pp. 2655-2660
Primary Research Article

The Contribution of Agriculture, Forestry and other Land Use activities to Global Warming, 1990–2012

Francesco N. Tubiello

Corresponding Author

Francesco N. Tubiello

Climate, Energy and Tenure Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Via Terme di Caracalla, Rome, 00153 Italy

Correspondence: Francesco N. Tubiello, tel. +39 06 57052169, fax +39 06 57053250, e-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Mirella Salvatore

Mirella Salvatore

Climate, Energy and Tenure Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Via Terme di Caracalla, Rome, 00153 Italy

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Alessandro F. Ferrara

Alessandro F. Ferrara

Climate, Energy and Tenure Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Via Terme di Caracalla, Rome, 00153 Italy

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Jo House

Jo House

School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol, University Road, Bristol, BS8 1SS UK

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Sandro Federici

Sandro Federici

Climate, Energy and Tenure Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Via Terme di Caracalla, Rome, 00153 Italy

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Simone Rossi

Simone Rossi

Climate, Energy and Tenure Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Via Terme di Caracalla, Rome, 00153 Italy

European Commission Joint Research Center, Ispra, VA, 28100 Italy

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Riccardo Biancalani

Riccardo Biancalani

Climate, Energy and Tenure Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Via Terme di Caracalla, Rome, 00153 Italy

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Rocio D. Condor Golec

Rocio D. Condor Golec

Climate, Energy and Tenure Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Via Terme di Caracalla, Rome, 00153 Italy

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Heather Jacobs

Heather Jacobs

Climate, Energy and Tenure Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Via Terme di Caracalla, Rome, 00153 Italy

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Alessandro Flammini

Alessandro Flammini

Climate, Energy and Tenure Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Via Terme di Caracalla, Rome, 00153 Italy

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Paolo Prosperi

Paolo Prosperi

Climate, Energy and Tenure Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Via Terme di Caracalla, Rome, 00153 Italy

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Paola Cardenas-Galindo

Paola Cardenas-Galindo

Climate, Energy and Tenure Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Via Terme di Caracalla, Rome, 00153 Italy

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Josef Schmidhuber

Josef Schmidhuber

Statistics Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Via Terme di Caracalla, Rome, 00153 Italy

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Maria J. Sanz Sanchez

Maria J. Sanz Sanchez

Forest Management Division, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Via Terme di Caracalla, Rome, 00153 Italy

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Nalin Srivastava

Nalin Srivastava

IPCC Task Force on National GHG Inventories, IGES, 2108-11 Kamiyamaguchi Hayama, Kanagawa, Japan

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Pete Smith

Pete Smith

Institute of Biological and Environmental Sciences, School of Biological Sciences, University of Aberdeen, 23 St Machar Drive, Room G45, Aberdeen, AB24 3UU, UK

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First published: 10 January 2015
Citations: 389

The views expressed in this paper are the authors' only and cannot be taken to represent FAO's position on the subject.

Abstract

We refine the information available through the IPCC AR5 with regard to recent trends in global GHG emissions from agriculture, forestry and other land uses (AFOLU), including global emission updates to 2012. Using all three available AFOLU datasets employed for analysis in the IPCC AR5, rather than just one as done in the IPCC AR5 WGIII Summary for Policy Makers, our analyses point to a down-revision of global AFOLU shares of total anthropogenic emissions, while providing important additional information on subsectoral trends. Our findings confirm that the share of AFOLU emissions to the anthropogenic total declined over time. They indicate a decadal average of 28.7 ± 1.5% in the 1990s and 23.6 ± 2.1% in the 2000s and an annual value of 21.2 ± 1.5% in 2010. The IPCC AR5 had indicated a 24% share in 2010. In contrast to previous decades, when emissions from land use (land use, land use change and forestry, including deforestation) were significantly larger than those from agriculture (crop and livestock production), in 2010 agriculture was the larger component, contributing 11.2 ± 0.4% of total GHG emissions, compared to 10.0 ± 1.2% of the land use sector. Deforestation was responsible for only 8% of total anthropogenic emissions in 2010, compared to 12% in the 1990s. Since 2010, the last year assessed by the IPCC AR5, new FAO estimates indicate that land use emissions have remained stable, at about 4.8 Gt CO2 eq yr−1 in 2012. Emissions minus removals have also remained stable, at 3.2 Gt CO2 eq yr−1 in 2012. By contrast, agriculture emissions have continued to grow, at roughly 1% annually, and remained larger than the land use sector, reaching 5.4 Gt CO2 eq yr−1 in 2012. These results are useful to further inform the current climate policy debate on land use, suggesting that more efforts and resources should be directed to further explore options for mitigation in agriculture, much in line with the large efforts devoted to REDD+ in the past decade.

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