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15+ Best and Popular US Carbon Offset Providers
15+ Best and Popular US Carbon Offset Providers
The carbon offset providers primarily work to reduce future emissions by investing in clean energy technologies, planting trees, or buying and compensating for the carbon emitted from emissions trading schemes. Offset providers widely vary in terms of their areas of focus and charges, and their operations are determined by their respective locations.
·conserve-energy-future.com·
15+ Best and Popular US Carbon Offset Providers
Agriculture data sharing: Conceptual tools in the technical toolbox and implementation in the Open Ag Data Alliance framework
Agriculture data sharing: Conceptual tools in the technical toolbox and implementation in the Open Ag Data Alliance framework
There are several composable, reusable concepts for designing privacy-focused systems in agriculture. Data privacy concepts can be deployed via the OADA framework. Clear privacy design patterns exis...
·acsess.onlinelibrary.wiley.com·
Agriculture data sharing: Conceptual tools in the technical toolbox and implementation in the Open Ag Data Alliance framework
Agrivoltaics Could Bring Agriculture and Renewable Energy Together
Agrivoltaics Could Bring Agriculture and Renewable Energy Together
Renewable energy production is growing in the United States, but expanding an energy system built on renewables – like solar or wind – means locating infrastructure closer to where those resources are either abundant and/or easily distributed. Research supported by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) is developing options where solar energy production and agriculture are partners rather than competitors for land. Renewable energy production is growing in the United States, but expanding an energy system built on renewables – like solar or wind – means locating infrastructure closer to where those resources are either abundant and/or easily distributed. Research supported by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) is developing options where solar energy production and agriculture are partners rather than competitors for land.  Led by the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, the Sustainably Co-locating Agricultural and Photovoltaic Electricity Systems (SCAPES) project is researching agrivoltaic systems—fields with both crops and solar panels—in a variety of land and climate types.  Additionally, the project features a combination of research, education and Extension activities at the University of Arizona, Colorado State University, Auburn University, the University of Illinois Chicago and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.  “Co-locating photovoltaic systems within productive pasture and crop land -- aptly named agrivoltaic systems -- not only provides potential economic benefit but could go a long way toward mitigating barriers to acceptance of photovoltaics for agriculture, as this synergy is a sustainable solution that does not compete for land. We are very happy to fund this collaborative project,” said Steven J. Thomson, National Program Leader.   Supported by NIFA’s Sustainable Agriculture Systems program, the project brings together people from multiple disciplines to take a complete look at the different dimensions of moving towards the use of more agrivoltaics in the United States.  The SCAPES project is working to provide a comprehensive analysis of the potential of agrivoltaics. Its goal is to maintain or increase crop yield; increase the combined (food and electricity) productivity of land; and diversify and increase farm profitability with diverse crops (row crops, forage and specialty crops) across three biophysically diverse regions in the U.S.: rainfed Illinois, dryland Colorado and irrigated Arizona.  SCAPES couples field experiments across three states with farm-scale economic analysis, farmer survey and a system modelling approach to extrapolate not only production outcomes but economic outcomes as well. Additionally, the project’s economic and Extension teams are examining strategies to overcome adoption barriers for agrivoltaics.  Watch how the SCAPES project is focusing on agrivoltaic systems—fields with both crops and solar panels—in a variety of land and climate types.
·nifa.usda.gov·
Agrivoltaics Could Bring Agriculture and Renewable Energy Together
Biden-Harris Administration Announces an Additional $325 Million in Pilot Projects through Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities, for Total Investment of $3.1 Billion | Natural Resources Conservation Service
Biden-Harris Administration Announces an Additional $325 Million in Pilot Projects through Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities, for Total Investment of $3.1 Billion | Natural Resources Conservation Service
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced today that USDA will invest an additional $325 million for 71 projects in the second Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities funding pool.
·nrcs.usda.gov·
Biden-Harris Administration Announces an Additional $325 Million in Pilot Projects through Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities, for Total Investment of $3.1 Billion | Natural Resources Conservation Service
Biden-Harris Administration Announces Historic Investment in Partnerships for 70 Climate-Smart Commodities and Rural Projects
Biden-Harris Administration Announces Historic Investment in Partnerships for 70 Climate-Smart Commodities and Rural Projects
WASHINGTON, Sept. 14, 2022 – Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced today that the Biden-Harris Administration through the U.S. Department of Agriculture is investing up to $2.8 billion in 70 selected projects under the first pool of the Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities funding opportunity, with projects from the second funding pool to be announced later this year.
·usda.gov·
Biden-Harris Administration Announces Historic Investment in Partnerships for 70 Climate-Smart Commodities and Rural Projects
Brent Loken: Can we create the "perfect" farm?
Brent Loken: Can we create the "perfect" farm?
About 10,000 years ago, humans began to farm. This agricultural revolution was a turning point in our history and enabled the existence of civilization. Today, nearly 40 percent of our planet is farmland. Spread all over the world, these lands are the pieces to a global puzzle we're all facing: in the future, how can we feed every member of a growing population a healthy diet? Brent Loken investigates. [Directed by Hype CG, narrated by Jack Cutmore-Scott, music by Gabriel Maia].
·ted.com·
Brent Loken: Can we create the "perfect" farm?
Can farmers fight climate change? New U.S. law gives them billions to try
Can farmers fight climate change? New U.S. law gives them billions to try
Cutting emissions from fertilizer and livestock will be key, scientists say
$25 billion to expand and safeguard forests and promote farming practices thought to be climate friendly.
Those include no-till agriculture and “cover crops,” plants cultivated simply to protect the soil. Researchers, environmental groups, and the farm industry agree that paying and training farmers to adopt those measures will improve soil health and water and air quality. “I think pretty much everyone across the board is pretty happy,” says Haley Leslie-Bole, a climate policy analyst with the World Resources Institute. But how much these practices will slow global warming is unclear. “It’s probably going to be positive, but how positive we don’t really know yet,” says Jonathan Sanderman, a soil scientist at the Woodwell Climate Research Center. A major factor is whether the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) spends the money on the practices most likely to have climate benefits. Another challenge is measuring and quantifying the reductions, a task complicated by the great diversity of U.S. land and farming practices and the complex biogeochemistry of the carbon cycle.
The new bill expands funding for those programs, allowing more farmers to get a per-acre payment for a wide range of activities expected to reduce or sequester carbon emissions, including no-till and cover crops.
Those interactions vary enormously with soil type and environmental conditions, and it can take years for the impact of changes in crop types or farming techniques to emerge.
Another reputedly climate-friendly practice is no-till farming, which is growing in popularity. By not plowing fields, farmers protect the topsoil from erosion. They also save on diesel, which benefits their bottom line and reduces carbon dioxide emissions. Crop yields can increase as carbon accumulates in the upper root zone, enriching the soil and helping it retain moisture.
Many climate advocates say the most cost-effective way to help the climate through agriculture is simply to farm less land and raise less livestock. That means persuading farmers not to convert grasslands or other carbon-rich lands to row crops such as corn and soybeans. But the bill includes no additional funding for USDA’s main program for protecting sensitive private land, the Conservation Reserve Program.
the bill also includes a special pot of $300 million for USDA and partners to collect field data on carbon sequestered and emissions reduced—data could help target future climate efforts more effectively, he and others say. “That’s really significant,” says Alison Eagle, an agricultural scientist with the Environmental Defense Fund. “This investment can help direct the next set of funding to the right place.”
The new money will expand on grants USDA recently funded, such as a 5-year project Ellen Herbert, an ecologist with Ducks Unlimited, is leading to measure carbon in wetlands across the central United States. She hopes to learn whether restoring wetlands or protecting adjacent land boosts the carbon they store. To resolve that, they’re taking unusually deep soil cores, delving to 1 meter or more. “It’s sometimes like trying to pound an aluminum tube through a brick,” Herbert says.
Also in the Midwest, agro-ecosystem scientist Bruno Basso of Michigan State University and colleagues are tracking how improved fertilizer strategies can lessen nitrous oxide emissions. In addition, they’re measuring soil carbon tucked away by perennial grasses planted on less productive parts of fields from North Dakota to Mississippi. Those grasses can be harvested for biofuels or hay—as well as cash for the carbon left by the roots—which perks up farmers’ ears, Basso says. “I say listen, you know what, there is a new crop and it’s called carbon.”
Data from the three projects will improve biogeochemical models that estimate daily fluxes of key greenhouse gases from agricultural land. One such model is DayCent, used by the Environmental Protection Agency and others for the national greenhouse gas inventory. “The accounting is not glamorous,” Himes says, “but if you don’t get that right, nothing else works.”
·science.org·
Can farmers fight climate change? New U.S. law gives them billions to try
Carbon Markets Driving Price Discovery - OpenMarkets
Carbon Markets Driving Price Discovery - OpenMarkets
Organizations working to reduce emissions are increasingly turning to carbon offsets to shrink their carbon footprint. A key challenge in carbon offsetting is how to price the credits. CME Group launched the Global Emissions Offset (GEO) futures contract in 2021 with the aim of making it a global benchmark, giving customers a way to manage risk, and helping in price discovery. CME Group followed the GEO contract with the launch of Nature-based GEO futures (N-GEO) in 2021 and Core GEO futures (C-GEO) in 2022.
·cmegroup.com·
Carbon Markets Driving Price Discovery - OpenMarkets
Catch Crop Residues Stimulate N2O Emissions During Spring, Without Affecting the Genetic Potential for Nitrite and N2O Reduction
Catch Crop Residues Stimulate N2O Emissions During Spring, Without Affecting the Genetic Potential for Nitrite and N2O Reduction
Agricultural soils are a significant source of anthropogenic nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions, because of fertilizer application and decomposition of crop residues. We studied interactions between nitrogen (N) amendments and soil conditions in a 2-year field experiment with or without catch crop incorporation before seeding of spring barley, and with or without application of N in the form of digested liquid manure or mineral N fertilizer. Weather conditions, soil inorganic N dynamics, and N2O emissions were monitored during spring, and soil samples were analyzed for abundances of nitrite reduction (nirK and nirS) and N2O reduction genes (nosZ clade I and II), and structure of nitrite- and N2O-reducing communities. Fertilization significantly enhanced soil mineral N accumulation compared to treatments with catch crop residues as the only N source. Nitrous oxide emissions, in contrast, were stimulated in rotations with catch crop residue incorporation, probably as a result of concurrent net N mineralization, and O2 depletion associated with residue degradation in organic hotspots. Emissions of N2O from digested manure were low in both years, while emissions from mineral N fertilizer were nearly absent in the first year, but comparable to emissions from catch crop residues in the second year with higher precipitation and delayed plant N uptake. Higher gene abundances, as well as shifts in community structure, were also observed in the second year, which were significantly corre...
·frontiersin.org·
Catch Crop Residues Stimulate N2O Emissions During Spring, Without Affecting the Genetic Potential for Nitrite and N2O Reduction