Comparison of major carbon offset standards for soil carbon projects in Australian grazing lands

Despite the potential role of soil carbon offset schemes to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, there are concerns that the rules for assessment, monitoring, and operation are barriers to engagement. This may explain why there is low participation of Australian landholders in soil carbon projects. This...

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Main Authors: Kalpana Pudasaini, John Rolfe, Thakur Bhattarai, Kerry Walsh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2024-12-01
Series:Carbon Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/17583004.2023.2298725
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author Kalpana Pudasaini
John Rolfe
Thakur Bhattarai
Kerry Walsh
author_facet Kalpana Pudasaini
John Rolfe
Thakur Bhattarai
Kerry Walsh
author_sort Kalpana Pudasaini
collection DOAJ
description Despite the potential role of soil carbon offset schemes to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, there are concerns that the rules for assessment, monitoring, and operation are barriers to engagement. This may explain why there is low participation of Australian landholders in soil carbon projects. This study reviews the literature on three leading voluntary carbon standards and methods to assess their suitability for developing soil carbon projects in grazing systems in Australia. The soil carbon method of each standard was analysed based on several criteria: scope, eligibility/applicability, newness and additionality, permanency, baselines and quantification methodology, environmental sustainability, safeguard mechanism, and crediting period. A hypothetical grazing case study in Central Queensland, Australia’s premier beef cattle region, was used to model the cost-effectiveness and potential returns from establishing soil carbon projects under the three standards. Results show that credits created under the Emissions Reduction Fund in Australia generate higher returns for soil carbon projects compared to the Verified Carbon Standard and Gold Standard. This is largely due to a higher market price for soil carbon credits in the Emissions Reduction Fund, reflecting more robust standards of assessment and verification. While assessment costs for credits were higher in the international schemes, returns were lower because prices reflected less rigorous standards.
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spelling doaj-art-647a2298490b4a3baff7358633f52e8b2024-12-12T09:54:01ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCarbon Management1758-30041758-30122024-12-0115110.1080/17583004.2023.2298725Comparison of major carbon offset standards for soil carbon projects in Australian grazing landsKalpana Pudasaini0John Rolfe1Thakur Bhattarai2Kerry Walsh3Centre for Regional Economies and Supply Chains (CRESC), School of Business and Law, CQUniversity, Rockhampton, AustraliaCentre for Regional Economies and Supply Chains (CRESC), School of Business and Law, CQUniversity, Rockhampton, AustraliaCentre for Regional Economies and Supply Chains (CRESC), School of Business and Law, CQUniversity, Rockhampton, AustraliaSchool of Health, Medical and Applied Sciences, Institute of Future Farming Systems, CQUniversity, Rockhampton, AustraliaDespite the potential role of soil carbon offset schemes to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, there are concerns that the rules for assessment, monitoring, and operation are barriers to engagement. This may explain why there is low participation of Australian landholders in soil carbon projects. This study reviews the literature on three leading voluntary carbon standards and methods to assess their suitability for developing soil carbon projects in grazing systems in Australia. The soil carbon method of each standard was analysed based on several criteria: scope, eligibility/applicability, newness and additionality, permanency, baselines and quantification methodology, environmental sustainability, safeguard mechanism, and crediting period. A hypothetical grazing case study in Central Queensland, Australia’s premier beef cattle region, was used to model the cost-effectiveness and potential returns from establishing soil carbon projects under the three standards. Results show that credits created under the Emissions Reduction Fund in Australia generate higher returns for soil carbon projects compared to the Verified Carbon Standard and Gold Standard. This is largely due to a higher market price for soil carbon credits in the Emissions Reduction Fund, reflecting more robust standards of assessment and verification. While assessment costs for credits were higher in the international schemes, returns were lower because prices reflected less rigorous standards.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/17583004.2023.2298725Soil carbongrazing landcost-effectivenessEmission Reduction FundVerified Carbon StandardGold Standard
spellingShingle Kalpana Pudasaini
John Rolfe
Thakur Bhattarai
Kerry Walsh
Comparison of major carbon offset standards for soil carbon projects in Australian grazing lands
Carbon Management
Soil carbon
grazing land
cost-effectiveness
Emission Reduction Fund
Verified Carbon Standard
Gold Standard
title Comparison of major carbon offset standards for soil carbon projects in Australian grazing lands
title_full Comparison of major carbon offset standards for soil carbon projects in Australian grazing lands
title_fullStr Comparison of major carbon offset standards for soil carbon projects in Australian grazing lands
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of major carbon offset standards for soil carbon projects in Australian grazing lands
title_short Comparison of major carbon offset standards for soil carbon projects in Australian grazing lands
title_sort comparison of major carbon offset standards for soil carbon projects in australian grazing lands
topic Soil carbon
grazing land
cost-effectiveness
Emission Reduction Fund
Verified Carbon Standard
Gold Standard
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/17583004.2023.2298725
work_keys_str_mv AT kalpanapudasaini comparisonofmajorcarbonoffsetstandardsforsoilcarbonprojectsinaustraliangrazinglands
AT johnrolfe comparisonofmajorcarbonoffsetstandardsforsoilcarbonprojectsinaustraliangrazinglands
AT thakurbhattarai comparisonofmajorcarbonoffsetstandardsforsoilcarbonprojectsinaustraliangrazinglands
AT kerrywalsh comparisonofmajorcarbonoffsetstandardsforsoilcarbonprojectsinaustraliangrazinglands