51070237
Humankind devotes an enormous amount of land to grazing animals and growing crops to feed them. But climate change means that more land will be needed to grow forests and bioenergy crops — which could mean less land for cows. Photo: gillmar / Shutterstock / NTB scanpix

Fewer cows, more trees and bioenergy

Combatting global warming will require major changes in land use, a new climate change report says. One important change could be decreasing the amount of land used to produce livestock — which means that people would have to eat less meat.

Francesco Cherubini likes to ask his Industrial Ecology students what’s the most common use of land today, and nearly all of them get the answer wrong.

“The correct answer is grazing land,” Cherubini, a professor and director of NTNU’s Industrial Ecology Programme. “Today we are using nearly half of the land on our planet to feed animals — and not people.”

Grazing is by far the largest single type of land use affecting the planet, a new IPCC report says. The impact that producing livestock is even greater when you consider that half of all cropland is used to produce feed for animals. Graphic: Francesco Cherubini, NTNU

Cherubini has more than an academic interest in this question — and what the answer means. He’s one of the lead authors of the IPCC’s new special report, released today, on Climate Change and Land, and was the only author from a Norwegian-based institution.

He formally handed the report to Ellen Hambro, Director General of the Norwegian Environment Agency, and Ola Elvestuen, Minister of Climate and Environment on Thursday, 8 August when the IPCC released the report.

The IPCC, the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, describes its newest report as an “assessment of the latest scientific knowledge about climate change, desertification, land degradation, sustainable land management, food security, and greenhouse gas fluxes in terrestrial ecosystems.”

The report also looks at the interrelationships between different competing land uses and how these could affect future potential climate outcomes.

Cherubini says the report offers policymakers yet more reasons to act on curbing greenhouse gas emissions and taking action to make sure that land use plays a positive role in solving the climate problem — and acting sooner rather than later.

“Land management is key for us to achieve our climate management objectives,” he said. “But we have competing land uses and limited land resources: we rely on land for animal feed, food, fibres and timber, and we need to preserve biodiversity and all the ecosystem services that land provides. And on top of that we have climate change.”

Competing uses, smart choices

The new report is an analysis of more than 7000 publications and looks at possible future scenarios to suggest the kinds of changes that need to happen under different socioeconomic situations, assuming society tries to limit warming to 1.5° C.

Professor Francesco Cherubini is director of NTNU’s Industrial Ecology Programme. He was one of the lead authors of a new report from the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and was the only author from a Norwegian research institution. Photo: NTNU/Lars R. Bang

Using these scenarios allowed Cherubini and his co-authors to see what kinds of actions would need to be taken — and when — to keep warming to the 1.5° C goal.

For example, if society changes to a more plant-based diet, more efficient agriculture and food production systems and embraces new cleaner energy technologies, this will make land available for key climate change mitigation measures such as growing more trees or bioenergy crops.

“We’ll need a lot of land for climate change mitigation,” he said, no matter what.

For example, even in the most sustainable future scenario that will allow us to meet the 1.5°degree goal, the amount of forest land needed to soak up CO2 by the end of this century will top out at about 7.5 million km2, or roughly the size of Australia, Cherubini said.

In contrast, when the researchers looked at a more resource-intensive future scenario, they found it will be necessary to devote 7.5 million km2 of land to bioenergy crops as early as 2050 to keep warming below 1.5° C. Another important component of using bioenergy under this scenario, he said, is that it will have to be coupled with more and earlier carbon capture and storage.

However, under all the scenarios, land has to be used for both bioenergy and for forest growth, as well as for food production and other human uses, Cherubini said.

“Bioenergy needs to be put in place with all the other climate change mitigation options to achieve the 1.5° C goal,” he said. “We shouldn’t think of this as a competition for land between forest and energy crops. We need both.”

“We have a choice”

When Cherubini and his colleagues looked at the different scenarios, they were also able to assess how these different futures would affect different parts of the globe in terms of food insecurity, land degradation and other negative impacts.

This allowed the scientists to provide an assessment of “how we do this in the best way possible,”  Cherubini said. “We have a choice in the kinds of risks we will experience based on what kind of socioeconomic development takes place.”

If society doesn’t develop in a sustainable way, he said the risk of land degradation and food insecurity is much higher, especially in developing countries. Additionally, mitigation efforts have to be designed carefully to make sure they have a beneficial effect, he said.

One example of how a well-intentioned programme can have unwanted or unanticipated effects is China’s “Grain for Green” programme, a massive tree-planting effort.

Under all the social development scenarios, planting trees to soak up carbon is important to curb global warming. It’s also a tool used to reverse soil erosion and land degradation, which is one reason why China undertook its programme.

But in the case of China’s efforts, at least some of the trees they planted were non-native. That meant that the trees took up more water than a native tree would have, and have increased the risks of causing other problems, such as water shortages, Cherubini said.

Eat more plants and make investments now

One aspect of the new report that has generated the most attention is the suggestion that societies move to more vegetarian diets.

“Balanced diets, featuring plant-based foods, such as those based on coarse grains, legumes, fruits and vegetables, nuts and seeds, and animal-sourced food produced in resilient, sustainable and low-GHG emission systems, present major opportunities for adaptation and mitigation while generating significant cobenefits in terms of human health,” the summary for policymakers says.

Cherubini says it’s clear that societies need to embrace this kind of change, along with improving and intensifying agricultural production.

The graphic shows how different land uses will have to change under two different socioeconomic development scenarios by the end of the century to keep global warming to 1.5 C. The panel on the left shows that forested areas will have to increase to as much 7.5 million km2, or about the size of Australia. The panel on the right shows that a more resource intensive economy will require the intensive use of bioenergy and growing forests for storing carbon starting as soon as 2030. Graphic: Francesco Cherubini/NTNU

Especially in places like Africa, where there is a gap between what the land could potentially produce and what is produced, there’s a great need for improvements, he said.

“We need to produce more with less so that land is available for other uses,” he said.  “What is clear, is that we need to change. We need cross-sectoral changes in our lifestyles and in our economies.”

Although these changes will cost money, the IPCC report emphasizes that the costs of inaction will exceed the costs of immediate action in many areas.  That means that money spent now can be seen as a sound investment, he said.

“These changes do not come for free, they do have a cost,” he said. “But should we talk about costs, or should we rather call it an investment?”