Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Personal tools
You are here: Home Economics Climate Change Policy Net Farm Income and Land Use under a U.S. Greenhouse Gas Cap and Trade

Net Farm Income and Land Use under a U.S. Greenhouse Gas Cap and Trade

Author(s): Justin S. Baker, Bruce A. McCarl, Brian C. Murray, Steven K. Rose, Ralph J. Alig, Darius Adams, Greg Latta, Robert Beach, and Adam Daigneault

Published: April 2010


During recent years, the U.S. agricultural sector has experienced high prices for energy-related inputs and commodities, and a rapidly developing bioenergy market. Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions mitigation would further alter agricultural markets and increase land competition in forestry and agriculture by shifting input costs, creating an agricultural GHG abatement market, and expanding bioenergy demand. The potential effects of these events on the agricultural sector are being hotly debated. We use a multisector model (FASOM-GHG, Adams et al, 2009) to estimate the potential implications of these developments on net farm income and the U.S. agricultural sector.

Access the publication online here >

Document Actions

     

     

  • Send this
  • Print this
breaking down barriers to
environmental progress
News    Events    Students    The Climate Post    Email Updates    RSS Feeds    Contact Us
  Ways to Give    Initiatives at Duke   Interdisciplinary Studies    Webmaster