Carbon farming continues to gain momentum ...

http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTCARBONFINANCE/Resources/New_Soil_Carbon_Methodology_Approved.pdf

New Soil Carbon Methodology Approved
World Bank and partners help smallholder farmers increase
productivity and revenue
Washington, January 30, 2012 –A new methodology to encourage
smallholder farmers in Kenya –
and potentially worldwide -- to adopt improved farming techniques,
boost productivity, increase
their resilience to climate change, and earn carbon credits, has been
given international approval.
The Verified Carbon Standard approved this first methodology on soil
carbon, a new approach
for sustainable agricultural land management (SALM) practices. The
methodology was
developed by the World Bank for the Smallholder Agriculture Carbon
Finance Project run by the
non-governmental organization Vi Agroforestry in western Kenya. The
pilot, involving more
than 60,000 smallholders who are farming 45,000 hectares of land, is
run together with
smallholder farmers and supported by the World Bank’s BioCarbon Fund.
Farmers in western Kenya experience the dire effects of climate change
first hand every day,
through drought and the decline of soil fertility that can be so
severe as to seriously threaten their
livelihoods.
“Our aim is to combat erosion and enrich degraded soil,” said Bo
Lager, Programme Director,
Vi Agroforestry. “The project farmers are increasing soil carbon and
organic matter through
mulching, cover crops, manure and plant waste management.”
These measures improve soil water infiltration and holding capacity,
as well as nutrient supply
and soil biodiversity. Better soils raise farm yields and incomes,
improving food security, and
should make agriculture more resilient to climate change. Further SALM
techniques such as less
plowing also reduce the release of carbon dioxide. “Smallholders can
earn carbon credits for
that,” added Lager. “Carbon finance helps make the project financially
sustainable.”
“Given the limited leverage of carbon finance for the agricultural
sector to date, this is an
important step in promoting linkages between agricultural
productivity, adaptation and climate
change mitigation,” said Joëlle Chassard, Manager of the World Bank’s
Carbon Finance Unit.
“The SALM methodology is a major step forward”, said Professor Pete
Smith, a Convening
Lead Author for the IPCC, based at Aberdeen University, UK. “Most
importantly, it extends
carbon finance to smallholders. It also enables cost-effective
monitoring of soil productivity
improvements, which can be particularly difficult across remote farms
in developing countries.”
“Carbon solutions need to be easily scalable, which requires broadly
applicable methodologies
and robust finance mechanisms”, pointed out Mike Robinson, Chief
Science Advisor at the
Syngenta Foundation for Sustainable Agriculture, a contributor to the
World Bank’s
BioCarbon Fund. “We see considerable potential for SALM replication
across Africa and
beyond.”
“The validation of this new methodology by the VCS is an important
achievement and a first step
to demonstrate the potential of carbon finance for rural development.
Soil carbon is of
fundamental importance not only to soil fertility, sustainable
agriculture and the development of
rural populations, particularly in Africa, but it is also strategic
for climate chage mitigation,”
said Jean-Luc François, Manager of the agriculture, rural development
and biodiversity
division at the Agence française de développement.


Josh Horton

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