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Michigan Michigan Commission of Commission of Agriculture Agriculture September 16, 2009 September 16, 2009 Climate Change Climate Change and the Farm and the Farm

Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

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Page 1: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

Michigan Michigan Commission of Commission of

AgricultureAgricultureSeptember 16, 2009September 16, 2009

Climate Change Climate Change

and the Farmand the Farm

Page 2: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

Challenges and Challenges and OpportunitiesOpportunities

Federal climate change legislation Federal climate change legislation may effect energy costsmay effect energy costs

Farmers engaged in conservation may Farmers engaged in conservation may benefit financiallybenefit financially

Forest landowners may benefit from Forest landowners may benefit from the sale of carbon offsetsthe sale of carbon offsets

Water quality is protectedWater quality is protected

Wildlife habitat is created or restoredWildlife habitat is created or restored

Page 3: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

Illustration Courtesy of NASA Earth Science Enterprise

Global Carbon Dioxide Cycle

Page 4: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX)

Voluntary, member-based, cap-and-trade market for the reduction of greenhouse gases, like CO2, methane, NO2 and chlorofluorocarbons

Self-regulated market with legally binding emission reduction targets

Cap is the member’s average annual emissions from 1998-2001

In 2006, members must reduce emissions 4% below the cap

By 2010, members must reduce emissions 6% below the cap

Over 200 members, including: Ford, Dow, AEP, Motorola, Waste

Management, City of Chicago, Michigan State University, State of New Mexico

Page 5: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

The Role of Carbon Offsets

The reduction of greenhouse gas emissions can be achieved through various activities.

One option available to CCX members is the purchase of carbon offsets.

2% of required 6% reduction can be achieved through offset purchases on the CCX.

Offsets can provide a cheaper alternative to capital improvements at facilities.

Offsets provide an investment in sustainable activities beyond those of just CCX members.

Page 6: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

Farmers/landowners earn greenhouse gas emissions credits when they use conservation tillage, plant grasses and trees, or capture methane with anaerobic digesters.

Conservation practices store carbon in the soil and plants. Anaerobic digesters produce energy and prevent methane from being released to the atmosphere.

Credits are aggregated from many landowners and sold through the Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX®).

Michigan Conservation and

Climate Initiative (MCCI)

Page 7: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

Michigan Department of Agriculture organized MCCI

Delta Institute: Aggregation; contracting with landowners; maintains program database; program promotion

CCX®: Trading platform and rules

Local Conservation Districts: Local outreach and enrollment assistance; CCX®-approved verifiers

MCCI Roles and Responsibilities

Page 8: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

Grass plantings as part of the Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program are eligible to sell carbon offsets at the rate of 1 metric ton per acre.

Page 9: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

Wildlife habitat is created as a result of addressing the climate change issue.

Page 10: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

Wetland restorations store runoff and creates habitat while sequestering carbon

in the upland border.

Page 11: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

CREP native grass

planting

Page 12: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

Bird watching and waterfowl hunting generate recreational revenue.

Page 13: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

Grass buffer strips create setbacks from surface water for crop production while providing the landowner compensation.

Page 14: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

Anaerobic digesters capture and flare off methane, generate electricity for

the farming operation or may be sold as electricity back to the grid.

Page 15: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

Tree plantations accrue carbon credits based on age and species -- on average 2.5 metric tons per acres.

Page 16: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

Conservation tillage accrues carbon in the soil at the rate of

.6 metric tons per acre.

Page 17: Michigan Commission of Agriculture September 16, 2009 Climate Change and the Farm

QUESTIONS?QUESTIONS?