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Analysis of the environmental and economic performance of common agricultural policy eco-schemes in soil organic carbon sequestration

Sergio Colombo, J. Castro, Daniel Peréz-Pérez, María Almagro

2024Ecological Economics14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The Andalusian olive grove in South Spain is employed as a case study to assess the environmental and economic effects of the green architecture (eco-schemes) of the Common Agricultural Policy in relation to low carbon agriculture under different soil management policy scenarios to support more efficient agri-environmental policy making. To do so, we adopted a multidisciplinary approach in which we used: (i) an integrated modelling framework comprising geographic information systems (GIS); (ii) the RothC model; and (iii) a cost-benefit analysis. Results show that eco-schemes provide a significant increase of soil organic carbon (SOC) relative to cross-compliance. Practices involving vegetation covers are more efficient than using pruning residues as mulching. SOC accumulation increases rapidly in the first five-ten years to slow down afterwards. The cost-benefit ratios of eco-schemes policy implementation are higher than one when only SOC is considered. Nonetheless, the inclusion of additional co-benefits has the potential to invert this scenario and enhance policy efficacy. Various insights on optimizing the design and application of eco-scheme efficiency are provided.

Topics & Concepts

Carbon sequestrationSoil carbonAgriculturePruningCommon Agricultural PolicyEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental economicsSustainabilityEnvironmental resource managementBusinessGeographyEconomicsSoil scienceSoil waterEcologyBiologyCarbon dioxideAgronomyArchaeologyLand Use and Ecosystem ServicesForest Management and PolicyAgriculture Sustainability and Environmental Impact
Analysis of the environmental and economic performance of common agricultural policy eco-schemes in soil organic carbon sequestration | Litcius