Mitigation Strategies for Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Agriculture and Land-Use Change: Consequences for Food Prices

被引:62
|
作者
Stevanovic, Miodrag [1 ,2 ]
Popp, Alexander [1 ]
Bodirsky, Benjamin Leon [3 ,4 ]
Humpenoeder, Florian [1 ]
Mueller, Christoph [3 ]
Weindl, Isabelle [3 ,5 ]
Dietrich, Jan Philipp [1 ]
Lotze-Campen, Hermann [3 ,6 ]
Kreidenweis, Ulrich [1 ,2 ]
Rolinski, Susanne [3 ]
Biewald, Anne [3 ]
Wang, Xiaoxi [3 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Potsdam Inst Climate Impact Res PIK, Sustainable Solut, D-14412 Potsdam, Germany
[2] Tech Univ Berlin, Econ Climate Change, D-10623 Berlin, Germany
[3] Potsdam Inst Climate Impact Res PIK, Climate Impacts & Vulnerabil, D-14412 Potsdam, Germany
[4] CSIRO, St Lucia, Qld 4067, Australia
[5] Leibniz Inst Agr Engn & Bioecon ATB, Technol Assessment & Substance Cycles, D-14469 Potsdam, Germany
[6] Humboldt Univ, Dept Agr Econ, D-10099 Berlin, Germany
关键词
CLIMATE-CHANGE; DEMAND; FUTURE; COST; MEAT; PRODUCTIVITY; CONSUMPTION; RESPONSES; SECURITY; IMPACTS;
D O I
10.1021/acs.est.6b04291
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The land use sector of agriculture, forestry, and Other land use (AFOLU) plays a central role in ambitions climate change mitigation efforts. Yet, mitigation policies in agriculture may be in conflict with food security related targets. Using a global agro economic model, we analyze the impacts on food prices under mitigation policies targeting either incentives for producers (e.g, through taxes) or consumer preferences (e.g., through education programs). Despite having a similar reduction, potential of 43-44% in 2100, the two types of policy instruments result in opposite outcomes for food prices. Incentive-based mitigation, such as protecting carbon-rich forests or adopting low-emission production techniques, increase land scarcity and production costs and thereby food prices. Preference-based mitigation, such as reduced household waste or lower consumption of animal-based products, decreases land scarcity, prevents emissions leakage, and,concentrates production on the most productive sites and Consequently lowers food prices. Whereas agricultural emissions are further abated in the combination of these mitigation measures, the synergy of strategies fails to substantially lower food prices. Additionally, we demonstrate that the efficiency of agricultural emission abatement is stable across a range of greenhouse-gas (GHG) tax levels, while resulting, food prices exhibit a disproportionally larger spread.
引用
收藏
页码:365 / 374
页数:10
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