| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4391122 | Ecological Engineering | 2007 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
It was estimated that the total amount of carbon that could be sequestered by reforesting 16.8Â Mha of cleared farmland is 2200Â Mt CO2-e, and between 290 and 1170Â Mt CO2-e by destocking 94.8Â Mha of rangelands. There were insufficient data to produce estimates of sequestration following changes in tillage practice in cropping systems or the revegetation of already salinized land. We conclude that carbon sinks are only likely to become profitable as a broad-scale stand-alone enterprise when carbon prices reach AUD$15/t CO2-e, with this threshold value varying with carbon yield and project costs. Below this price, their value can be significant as an adjunct to reforestation schemes that are aimed at providing other products (wood, pulp, bioenergy) and land and water conservation benefits. Irrespective of this, carbon sinks provide an opportunity to both sequester carbon in a least-cost fashion and improve soil and watershed management.
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Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Authors
R.J. Harper, A.C. Beck, P. Ritson, M.J. Hill, C.D. Mitchell, D.J. Barrett, K.R.J. Smettem, S.S. Mann,
