• Title of article

    Crops, cows or timber? Including carbon values in land use choices

  • Author/Authors

    Tek Narayan Maraseni، نويسنده , , Geoff Cockfield، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    280
  • To page
    288
  • Abstract
    Farm forestry is a very minor land use in the inland agricultural landscapes of Australia. The Australian Government intends to introduce a program to encourage landholders to trade the carbon sequestration value of plantations and this may change the relative profitability of plantations against other agricultural land uses. This research compares the returns from a timber and ‘carbon’ plantation, with those from grazing and a common crop rotation in the Kingaroy area of Queensland. Typical production patterns for all systems were developed from producer and expert knowledge and soil and vegetation sampling were used to estimate sequestration rates. The costs and benefits of all land use systems were converted into monetary terms and discounted to produce net present values. With a standard discount rate and average commodity prices based on recent history, cultivation is the most profitable option, followed by pasture and plantations. After the inclusion of carbon, plantations are the most profitable option, followed by pasture and cultivation. A number of qualifications of these findings are also discussed.
  • Keywords
    Spotted gum plantation , Carbon values , Greenhouse gas emissions , Carbon sequestration
  • Journal title
    Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Journal title
    Agriculture Ecosystems and Environment
  • Record number

    1285504