Greenhouse gas and nitrogen fertilizer scenarios for U.S. agriculture and global biofuels

Greenhouse gas and nitrogen fertilizer scenar ...
Amani Elobeid, Amani Elobeid
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Last edited by MARC Bot
October 17, 2020 | History

Greenhouse gas and nitrogen fertilizer scenarios for U.S. agriculture and global biofuels

This analysis uses the 2011 FAPRI-CARD (Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute -- Center for Agricultural and Rural Development) baseline to evaluate the impact of four alternative scenarios on U.S. and world agricultural markets, as well as on world fertilizer use and world agricultural greenhouse gas emissions. A key assumption in the 2011 baseline is that ethanol support policies disappear in 2012. The baseline also assumes that existing biofuel mandates remain in place and are binding. Two of the scenarios are adverse supply shocks, the first being a 10% increase in the price of nitrogen fertilizer in the United States, and the second, a reversion of cropland into forestland. The third scenario examines how lower energy prices would impact world agriculture. The fourth scenario reintroduces biofuel tax credits and duties. Given that the baseline excludes these policies, the fourth scenario is an attempt to understand the impact of these policies under the market conditions that prevail in early 2011. A key to understanding the results of this fourth scenario is that in the absence of tax credits and duties, the mandate drives biofuel use. Therefore, when the tax credits and duties are reintroduced, the impacts are relatively small. In general, the results show that the entire international commodity market system is remarkably robust with respect to policy changes in one country or in one sector. The policy implication is that domestic policy changes implemented by a large agricultural producer like the United States can have fairly significant impacts on the aggregate world commodity markets. A second point that emerges from the results is that the law of unintended consequences is at work in world agriculture. For example, a U.S. nitrogen tax that might presumably be motivated for environmental benefit results in an increase in world greenhouse gas emissions. A similar situation occurs in the afforestation scenario in which crop production shifts from high-yielding land in the United States to low-yielding land and probably native vegetation in the rest of the world, resulting in an unintended increase in global greenhouse gas emissions.

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Edition Availability
Cover of: Greenhouse gas and nitrogen fertilizer scenarios for U.S. agriculture and global biofuels
Greenhouse gas and nitrogen fertilizer scenarios for U.S. agriculture and global biofuels
2011, Center for Agricultural and Rural Development, Iowa State University
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

"June 2011."

Author-supplied keywords: afforestation, energy price, ethanol tax credit, fertilizer, partial equilibrium model, policy analysis.

Includes bibliographical references (p. 39-40). 12

Also available via the Internet at: http://www.card.iastate.edu/publications/dbs/pdffiles/11wp524.pdf

Published in
Ames, Iowa
Series
Working paper -- 11-WP 524, Working paper (Iowa State University. Center for Agricultural and Rural Development) -- 11-WP 524.

Classifications

Library of Congress
HD9502.5.B542 G74 2011

The Physical Object

Pagination
41 p. :
Number of pages
41

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL25339074M
LCCN
2011506877
OCLC/WorldCat
732687452

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October 17, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
June 14, 2012 Created by LC Bot import new book