家庭农业知识平台

Pre- and post-production processes along supply chains 2 increasingly dominate GHG emissions from agri-food systems 3 globally and in most countries

We present results from the FAOSTAT agri-food systems emissions database, relative to 236 countries 21 and territories and over the period 1990-2019. We find that in 2019, world-total food systems emissions were 16.5 billion metric tonnes (Gt CO2eq yr-1 22 ), corresponding to 31% of total anthropogenic emissions. Of the agri-food 23 systems total, global emissions within the farm gate –from crop and livestock production processes including onfarm energy use—were 7.2 Gt CO2eq yr-1 24 ; emissions from land use change, due to deforestation and peatland degradation, were 3.5 Gt CO2eq yr-1 25 ; and emissions from pre- and post-production processes –manufacturing of 26 fertilizers, food processing, packaging, transport, retail, household consumption and food waste disposal—were 5.8 Gt CO2eq yr-1 27 . Over the study period 1990-2019, agri-food systems emissions increased in total by 17%, largely 28 driven by a doubling of emissions from pre- and post-production processes. Conversely, the FAO data show that 29 since 1990 land use emissions decreased by 25%, while emissions within the farm gate increased only 9%. In 2019, in terms of single GHG, pre- and post- production processes emitted the most CO2 (3.9 Gt CO2 yr-1 30 ), preceding land use change (3.3 Gt CO2 yr-1 ) and farm-gate (1.2 Gt CO2 yr-1 31 ) emissions. Conversely, farm-gate activities were by far the major emitter of methane (140 Mt CH4 yr-1 ) and of nitrous oxide (7.8 Mt N2O yr-1 32 ). Preand post- processes were also significant emitters of methane (49 Mt CH4 yr-1 33 ), mostly generated from the decay 34 of solid food waste in landfills and open-dumps. The most important trend over the 30-year period since 1990 35 highlighted by our analysis is the increasingly important role of food-related emissions generated outside of 36 agricultural land, in pre- and post-production processes along food supply chains, at all scales from global, regional and national, from 1990 to 2019. In fact, our data show that by 2019, food supply chains had overtaken farm-gate 2 processes to become the largest GHG component of agri-food systems emissions in Annex I parties (2.2 Gt CO2eq yr-1 ). They also more than doubled in non-Annex I parties (to 3.5 Gt CO2eq yr-1 3 ), becoming larger than emissions 4 from land-use change. By 2019 food supply chains had become the largest agri-food system component in China (1100 Mt CO2eq yr-1 ); USA (700 Mt CO2eq yr-1 ) and EU-27 (600 Mt CO2eq yr-1 5 ). This has important repercussions 6 for food-relevant national mitigation strategies, considering that until recently these have focused mainly on 7 reductions of non-CO2 gases within the farm gate and on CO2 mitigation from land use change. The information 8 used in this work is available as open data at: https://zenodo.org/record/5615082 (Tubiello et al., 2021d). It is also 9 available to users via the FAOSTAT database (FAO, 2021a), with annual updates.

:
:
:
:
:
:
:
:
:
:
:
:
组 织: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
其他组织: Center on Global Energy Policy - Columbia University New York USA, United Nations Industrial Development Organization - Department of Environment Vienna Austria, Potsdam Institute for Global Climate Research - Potsdam Germany, International Energy Agency - Paris France, United Nations Statistics Division - New York USA, Department of Environmental Science New York University - New York USA, Center of Global Climate Research, Columbia University New York USA, NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies New York USA
年份: 2021
:
:
:
类别: 报告
内容语言: English
:

分享本页内容