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Technical Working Group on Agricultural Greenhouse Gases (T-AGG)

About T-AGG >    |  Coordinating Team >   |  Original Advisory Groups >


About T-AGG:

The Technical Working Group for Agricultural Greenhouse Gases (T-AGG) will lay the scientific and analytical foundation necessary for building a suite of methodologies for high-quality greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation for the agricultural sector. This sound foundation should result in wide acceptance for compliance-grade GHG within the U.S. and worldwide. Agriculture accounts for about 10%–12% of global anthropogenic emissions of GHGs. The global mitigation potential from agriculture (excluding biomass fuel offsets) is estimated to be 5,500–6,000 million tons of carbon dioxide equivalent per year (MtCO2e/yr) by 2030, most of which is from carbon sequestration (IPCC 2007). Despite the significant potential for GHG mitigation within agriculture, only a few high-quality and widely approved methodologies for quantifying agricultural GHG benefits have been developed. This project aims to generate momentum for the inclusion of agriculture as a climate change mitigation option in the U.S. and abroad. Our process involves expert assessment to ensure high-quality mitigation. It will include engagement of stakeholders and decision makers throughout.

The Nicholas Institute, working together with Duke University and Kansas State University colleagues, will coordinate and complete a transparent and scientifically founded review of GHG mitigation opportunities in the U.S. and abroad. For the best of these opportunities, the team will conduct the analytical assessments necessary to initiate development of high-integrity methodologies. This will be done with significant expert input, and will result in a series of technical reports with executive summaries for stakeholders and decision makers. The project will begin by the end of October 2009 and be completed by the end of 2011. Because of the critical role that agriculture plays in both domestic and international policies currently under discussion, the project will prioritize ongoing engagement with stakeholders, including agricultural organizations and policymakers.

We hope to work with others involved in synthesizing research or developing protocols for greenhouse gas mitigation and agriculture. We are very interested in finding ways to collaborate or cooperate as we hope our final products will be inclusive syntheses that can provide vital information to private and public entities who want to develop agricultural protocols. Please let us know if you have related work under way that we should be aware of. Please e-mail T-AGGteam@duke.edu. Lydia or Alison will respond.

read the press release > 

For more about T-AGG's strategy and role:

T-AGG Overview >

 

This work is funded through the generous support of the David and Lucile Packard Foundation.

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Project Director:

Lydia Olander - Director of Ecosystem Services Program, Nicholas Institute, Duke University


Former Coordinating Team:

Research Director
Alison Eagle - Research Scientist, Duke University

Associate in Policy and Research
Lucy Henry - Nicholas Institute, Duke University

 

Internal Advisors:

Research Advisor
Rob Jackson - Chair of Global Environmental Change at the Nicholas School and Professor in the Biology Department, Duke University

Research Advisor
Charles Rice - University Distinguished Professor of Soil Microbiology, Department of Agronomy, Kansas State University

Economic Advisor
Brian Murray - Director of Economic Analysis at the Nicholas Institute and Research Professor at the Nicholas School, Duke University


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Original Advisory Groups:

Advisory Board

Elly Baroudy, The BioCarbon Fund, World Bank

Ernest Shea, 25x’25 Project Coordinator

Eric Holst, Environmental Defense Fund and Steering Committee for C-AGG

Karen Haugen-Kozyra, KHK Consulting

Pradip K. Das, New Technology Business Applications Director, Monsanto Co.

Keith Paustian, Professor and Senior Research Scientist, NREL, Colorado State University

Bill Irving, Chief - Program Integration Branch, Climate Change Division, USEPA

Carolyn Olson, National Leader Climate Change Office of the Deputy Chief SSRA, USDA-NRCS


Science Committee

Phil Robertson, Professor of Ecosystem Science, W.K. Kellogg Biological Station and Department of Crop and Soil Sciences of Michigan State University

Cesar Izaurralde, Fellow, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, DOE and Adjunct Professor University of Maryland

Ron Follett, Supervisory Soil Scientist, Soil and Plant Nutrient Research, USDA ARS

John Antle, Professor in Applied Economics, Oregon State University College of Agricultural Sciences

Keith Paustian, Professor and Senior Research Scientist, NREL, Colorado State University

William Salas, President and Chief Scientist, Applied Geosolutions, Inc.

 

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