4.6 Article

Capturing a soil carbon economy

Journal

ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.202305

Keywords

soil carbon; carbon sequestration; soil ecosystem services; re-carbonization; soil carbon economics; payment

Funding

  1. Research England's Connecting Capability Fund (CCF)
  2. Royal Society [NAF\R2\180676]
  3. Carlos Chagas Foundation for Research Support of the State of Rio de Janeiro Faperj [E-26/202.680/2018]
  4. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior Finance [00]
  5. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development-CNPq [308536/2018-5]
  6. Research England's Connecting Capability Fund (CCF
  7. through the EIRA project VALCRUM)
  8. Research England's Connecting Capability Fund (CCF
  9. through the EIRA project PANEZA)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Current carbon pricing and trading mechanisms may be effective in reducing emissions, but financial incentives for activities that sequester carbon are needed to achieve Net Zero targets. Developing a soil-based carbon economy could accelerate climate change mitigation and realize net gains in soil health and ecosystem services.
Current carbon pricing and trading mechanisms, despite their efficacy in reducing GHG emissions from industry, will not be sufficient to achieve Net Zero targets. Current mechanisms that redress emissions are largely economic disincentives, in effect financial penalties for emitters. In order to attain Net Zero futures, financial incentives for activities that sequester carbon from the atmosphere are needed. Herein, we present the environmental and economic co-benefits of soil re-carbonization and justify support for soil carbon remuneration. With increasing momentum to develop green economies, and projected increases in carbon price, growth in the global carbon market is inevitable. The establishment of a soil-based carbon economy, within this emerging financial space, has the potential to deliver a paradigm shift that will accelerate climate change mitigation, and concurrently realize net gains for soil health and the delivery of soil ecosystem services. Pivotal to the emergence of a global soil carbon economy will be a consensus on certification instruments used for long-term soil carbon storage, and the development of robust institutional agreements and processes to facilitate soil carbon trading.

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