Zuidema Shan, Liu Jing, Chepeliev Maksym G, Johnson David R, Baldos Uris Lantz C, Frolking Steve, Kucharik Christopher J, Wollheim Wilfred M, Hertel Thomas W
Earth Systems Research Center, Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH 03824.
Department of Agricultural Economics, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2023 Oct 24;120(43):e2302087120. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2302087120. Epub 2023 Oct 16.
We utilize a coupled economy-agroecology-hydrology modeling framework to capture the cascading impacts of climate change mitigation policy on agriculture and the resulting water quality cobenefits. We analyze a policy that assigns a range of United States government's social cost of carbon estimates ($51, $76, and $152/ton of CO-equivalents) to fossil fuel-based CO emissions. This policy raises energy costs and, importantly for agriculture, boosts the price of nitrogen fertilizer production. At the highest carbon price, US carbon emissions are reduced by about 50%, and nitrogen fertilizer prices rise by about 90%, leading to an approximate 15% reduction in fertilizer applications for corn production across the Mississippi River Basin. Corn and soybean production declines by about 7%, increasing crop prices by 6%, while nitrate leaching declines by about 10%. Simulated nitrate export to the Gulf of Mexico decreases by 8%, ultimately shrinking the average midsummer area of the Gulf of Mexico hypoxic area by 3% and hypoxic volume by 4%. We also consider the additional benefits of restored wetlands to mitigate nitrogen loading to reduce hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico and find a targeted wetland restoration scenario approximately doubles the effect of a low to moderate social cost of carbon. Wetland restoration alone exhibited spillover effects that increased nitrate leaching in other parts of the basin which were mitigated with the inclusion of the carbon policy. We conclude that a national climate policy aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions in the United States would have important water quality cobenefits.
我们运用一个经济 - 农业生态 - 水文耦合建模框架,来捕捉气候变化缓解政策对农业的连锁影响以及由此产生的水质协同效益。我们分析了一项政策,该政策将美国政府一系列碳社会成本估算值(51美元、76美元和152美元/吨二氧化碳当量)应用于基于化石燃料的二氧化碳排放。这项政策提高了能源成本,而对农业而言重要的是,它提高了氮肥生产成本。在最高碳价格下,美国碳排放量减少约50%,氮肥价格上涨约90%,导致密西西比河流域玉米生产的化肥施用量减少约15%。玉米和大豆产量下降约7%,作物价格上涨6%,而硝酸盐淋失量下降约10%。模拟的向墨西哥湾的硝酸盐排放量减少8%,最终使墨西哥湾低氧区的平均仲夏面积缩小3%,低氧体积缩小4%。我们还考虑了恢复湿地以减轻氮负荷从而减少墨西哥湾低氧现象的额外效益,并发现一个有针对性的湿地恢复方案能使低至中等碳社会成本的效果大致翻倍。仅湿地恢复就表现出溢出效应,增加了流域其他地区的硝酸盐淋失,而碳政策的纳入减轻了这种情况。我们得出结论,旨在减少美国温室气体排放的国家气候政策将带来重要的水质协同效益。