creators_name: Cooper, Julia M. creators_name: Melchett, Peter type: conference_item datestamp: 2008-09-23 lastmod: 2009-08-20 14:37:18 metadata_visibility: show title: Should organic farmers be rewarded for sequestering C in soil? ispublished: pub subjects: 5soil subjects: 7biodiversity subjects: 5emissions full_text_status: public keywords: organic farming, soil organic carbon, carbon sequestration, greenhouse gas emissions abstract: The question of whether farmers, and organic farmers in particular, should be rewarded for sequestering C in soils is controversial. A review of the literature on long term experiments comparing organic and conventional systems, demonstrates that soils under organic management tend to have higher soil organic carbon (SOC) contents than conventionally managed soils. But the logistics of designing a system that compensates individual farmers for this ecosystem service are challenging. Agreements would have to be reached on the baseline system used for calculation of relative gains in SOC, values for emissions of other GHGs from soils (e.g. methane and nitrous oxide), the direct and indirect CO2 emissions associated with energy use and crop production inputs in the C sequestering system, and emissions associated with sources of SOC imported onto the farm. Alternatively, the evidence for generally higher SOC under organic management could justify an additional payment, for example under the UK Government’s Organic Entry Level Scheme. date: 2008 date_type: published refereed: yes citation: Cooper, Julia M. and Melchett, Peter (2008) Should organic farmers be rewarded for sequestering C in soil? Cultivating the Future Based on Science: 2nd Conference of the International Society of Organic Agriculture Research ISOFAR, Modena, Italy, June 18-20, 2008. document_url: http://orgprints.org/11425/1/11425.pdf