National Post

FARMERS PLANT FOR THE PLANET

‘REGENERATI­VE’ FARMING TECHNIQUES HOLD OUT HOPE OF TAKING BIG CHUNK OUT OF WORLD’S CARBON EMISSIONS

- GABRIEL POPKIN

RESEARCHER­S ESTIMATE THAT FARMING THROUGHOUT HISTORY HAS UNEARTHED ROUGHLY 133 BILLION TONNES OF CARBON, AN AMOUNT EQUAL TO ALMOST 14 YEARS OF GLOBAL EMISSIONS AT CURRENT LEVELS.

Maryland farmer Trey Hill pulled in a healthy haul of corn last fall and then immediatel­y planted rye, turnips, clover and other species, which are now spreading a lush green carpet over the soil. While his grandfathe­r, who started the family farm along the Chesapeake bay, always planted in the spring in a clean field, in Hill’s approach to farming, “you never want to see the ground.”

As the winter cover crops grow, they will feed microbes and improve the soil’s health, which Hill believes will eventually translate into higher yields of the crops that provide his income: corn, soybean and wheat.

but just as important, they will pull down carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and store it in the ground. Hill is at the cutting edge of what many hope will provide not just a more nature-friendly way of farming, but a powerful new climate solution.

In early 2020, he became the first seller in a privately run farmer-focused marketplac­e that paid him us$115,000 for practices that, over the past few years, had sequestere­d just over 8,000 tonnes of carbon in the soil. The money came from corporatio­ns and individual­s who want to offset carbon dioxide their activities produce. Hill used the proceeds to buy equipment he hopes will allow him to squirrel away even more of the planet-warming gas.

If farmers throughout the world adopted similar “regenerati­ve” methods, experts estimate they could sequester a large chunk of the world’s carbon emissions. The idea has been endorsed by soil scientists, a slew of food industry giants and, recently, u.s. President Joe biden.

but some doubt that farmed soils can reliably store carbon long enough to make a difference for the climate — or that changes in soil carbon can accurately yet affordably be measured. Others worry voluntary measures such as soil sequestrat­ion could make a polluting food and agricultur­e industry appear environmen­tally friendly while delaying stronger climate action.

researcher­s and companies are now racing to reduce the scientific uncertaint­ies and win over skeptics.

Many scientists are confident that farming can be adapted to build carbon into soils, said deborah bossio, a soil scientist at the Nature Conservanc­y, an environmen­tal organizati­on.

“We know how to do it,” she said.

Agricultur­e has done a masterful job of feeding the world’s burgeoning population. It has been less wonderful for the climate. For thousands of years, plowing has mixed undergroun­d carbon-containing compounds with atmospheri­c oxygen, creating carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas that is driving climate change.

researcher­s estimate that farming throughout history has unearthed roughly 133 billion tonnes of carbon, an amount equal to almost 14 years of global emissions at current levels.

To prevent climate change from irrevocabl­y damaging human civilizati­on and the world’s ecosystems, humans must reduce carbon emissions enough to prevent the average global temperatur­e from rising more than 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, scientists say. Some areas of the planet have already passed that threshold.

As scientists over the past few decades came to appreciate the threat climate change poses, some wondered whether carbon already in the atmosphere could be captured and returned to the soil. A team bossio led estimated in early 2020 that if such solutions were implemente­d globally, soils could provide nearly 10 per cent of the carbon dioxide drawdown needed to avert climate catastroph­e.

Soil carbon building practices, loosely gathered under the term “regenerati­ve agricultur­e,” have been followed for decades, or centuries in some places. Planting without tilling the soil took off after the devastatin­g dust bowl in the 1930s spurred a search for ways to avert further soil loss, and the practice now includes more than a fifth of u.s. farmland. Maryland has paid farmers to plant cover crops since the 1990s to stifle the flow of nitrogen into the Chesapeake bay. Some livestock producers rotate animals on pastures of grasses and legumes, whose roots pull carbon undergroun­d. And though rare in the united States today, farmers elsewhere in the world mix trees into fields and pastures.

Hill said he first got into cover crops because the state paid him.

“We had no intent of doing it for climate,” he said.

but he has since become a true believer. He now mixes rye and other fast-growing grasses with legumes such as clover and lentils, whose roots host nitrogen-fixing bacteria. He also plants root crops such as radishes and turnips to loosen and aerate the soil.

While most farmers kill their cover crops in March, as soon as the state allows, Hill lets the plants grow taller than he is, to maximize root mass and carbon gains. He kills them just before planting his cash crop in May.

“The longer the cover crop is alive, the better off we all are,” he said.

There are barriers that keep more farmers from following his lead, Hill said. He has had to buy specialize­d equipment, and climate-friendly farming hasn’t yet translated to higher yields or premium prices.

“It’s (difficult) to farm this way,” he said.

Turnips can get stuck in his planting equipment, costing his team valuable time, for example.

“It makes life a lot more difficult, and not necessaril­y more profitable.”

Hill sells most of his corn to a chicken producer, which pays him the same market price other suppliers get. If farmers were paid for the carbon accumulati­ng in their soils, they would have greater incentive to adopt climate-friendly practices, Hill added.

but implementi­ng that idea is challengin­g. Carbon accumulate­s slowly in soil, and past attempts to pay farmers for it have failed when the costs of verifying carbon gains exceeded what buyers were willing to pay. backers of new, private-sector carbon markets hope that computer models fed by data from farm fields, satellites and hand-held carbon sensors can measure and predict soil carbon gains more cheaply and reliably.

Hill connected with one market, a Seattle-based tech startup called Nori. After lengthy negotiatio­ns, credits representi­ng carbon stored in some of Hill’s fields went on sale in October 2019 at us$16.50 a tonne — around the most an acre of his farmland might capture in a year, Hill said. buyers included the e-commerce company Shopify, Arizona State university and individual­s looking to offset the carbon their activities produce.

Nori avoids traditiona­l soil tests, which can cost thousands of dollars for a large farm, and instead relies on third-party audits and a u.s. Agricultur­e department computer model called COMET-FARM that estimates greenhouse gas emissions from farms.

Nori has competitor­s. One is Indigo Ag, a boston-based ag-tech company that has lined up corporate customers including Jpmorgan Chase, boston Consulting Group and dogfish Head to buy credits for carbon stored in more than a million acres of farmland across 21 states. After farmers upload their 2020 data, Indigo will calculate the amount of carbon stored and verify the numbers with a third party, a process that could take six months.

Still, the emerging market has hit speed bumps. Nori had hoped to enrol more than 100 farmers in 2020, but so far, only Hill and an Iowa farmer have sold credits on the marketplac­e, with three more in the final stage of verificati­on, said radhika Moolgavkar, a Nori program manager. At least one potential buyer, Microsoft, which has pledged to go “carbon negative” by 2030, turned down Nori’s credits because they weren’t backed by physical soil samples, Moolgavkar said. A Microsoft spokespers­on declined to confirm that account.

“We’re seeing market formation in real time,” said david Lezaks, a senior fellow at the Croatan Institute, a non-profit organizati­on that researches sustainabl­e investment.

The maturation of soil carbon science has complicate­d matters. reduced tillage, already practised by thousands of farmers, was once considered a major climate win because researcher­s saw carbon accumulate near the surface of untilled soils. but studies that sampled deeper soil layers revealed that carbon was lost there, wiping out most of the apparent gains.

Cover crops, whose roots and stalks add organic matter to the soil, have become the hotter item. A recent global meta-analysis estimated that if cover crops were planted on 15 per cent of the world’s cropland, soils could soak up between one and two per cent of all fossil fuel emissions. In december, biden announced he wants to pay farmers to plant cover crops, and his usda transition team has called for setting up a “carbon bank” within the first 100 days of his administra­tion that would pay farmers, ranchers and forest owners for climate-friendly practices.

The u.s. dept. of Agricultur­e already offers three-year grants to encourage farmers to grow cover crops, but those have had limited impact. A 2017 usda census found that cover crops were grown on less than four per cent of u.s. cropland.

Some question the climate benefits. In papers published last year based on long-term research plots in Iowa and California, scientists reported that when they measured carbon in soil to a depth of a metre or more, the gains of cover crops largely disappeare­d, similar to what had happened to no-till. by contrast, organic farming may do more to build deep reserves of carbon, those and other studies suggest. Clearly, more research is needed.

 ?? PHOTOS: GABRIELLA demczuk / FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? A mixture of winter cover crops fill a field outside Chestertow­n, Md., where farmer Trey Hill strives to reduce carbon emissions.
PHOTOS: GABRIELLA demczuk / FOR THE WASHINGTON POST A mixture of winter cover crops fill a field outside Chestertow­n, Md., where farmer Trey Hill strives to reduce carbon emissions.
 ??  ?? One of Hill’s planters has been retrofitte­d for
“no-till” farming.
One of Hill’s planters has been retrofitte­d for “no-till” farming.
 ??  ?? Trey Hill
Trey Hill

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