SACRAMENTO COUNTY, CALIF.—Leo Van Warmderdam pointed to a red shed housing a large generator on his family’s dairy farm as he loped over two acres of manure. The thick black plastic stretching across the manure ballooned as he walked on it, inflated by methane building from beneath. The cover seemed to be doing its job: It didn’t smell much different above the lagoon than it did elsewhere in this livestock-dominated swath of the Central Valley, just south of Sacramento.
Beneath the sun-parched plastic, microbes were breaking down the manure from about 1,000 cows into methane, which was being piped to the generator and burned to produce electricity.
These systems are called biogas digesters, and they’re helping to protect the climate from methane, which is a far more potent than carbon dioxide. As the world’s appetite for meat and dairy has grown, agriculture has become a bigger cause of than deforestation, and that’s mostly because of the methane released by livestock farming.
On Thursday, the Obama Administration laid out a for reducing climate pollution that focused on rural areas, including farms and forests. Key among those 10 points was a plan to encourage more farmers to install biogas digesters, and to support 500 more biogas installations at farms during the next decade.
The government will partner with farmers to “significantly reduce” their climate impacts through “incentive-based initiatives,” U.S. Agriculture Secretary during a speech in Michigan on Thursday. That would be done, he said, “while improving yields, increasing farm operation's energy efficiency, and helping farmers and ranchers earn revenue from clean energy production."
The EPA that such systems are “technically feasible” at more than 8,200 American dairy and swine farms, and that they could also be used at some poultry operations. Yet fewer than 200 had been installed nationwide, with high costs found to be a primary reason for the tardy uptake.
California’s cap-and-trade system requires large climate polluters, including power plants and gasoline suppliers, to purchase permits that allow the release of climate-changing carbon dioxide. The allowances sell for a little more than $12 per ton of carbon dioxide, with about $1 billion a year in on green projects. Revenues are projected to grow in the coming years, even as the cap on the number of allowances available is shrunk to help the state meet its ambitious .
But the agricultural and forestry sectors, and methane pollution and ozone-depleting greenhouse gases are not directly regulated by the scheme. So California gives polluters that are regulated by it an option. If they can find a cheaper way of keeping the equivalent of a ton of carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere, by spending on certain types of , then they can use carbon offset credits from those projects instead of allowances to permit the release of up to 8 percent of their pollution.
The operator, , sells electricity from the burning methane to the local utility. He’s also working with a broker who will sell offset credits produced by the project to Californian polluters. When he operates in Washington state, Maas instead sells such offsets to voluntary programs, such as those that offer to offset the climate impacts of a long flight or a corporation’s operations, though those bring in considerably less cash.
Carbon offsets like those allowed in California are common in cap-and-trade systems, which are in popularity worldwide. But offsets are controversial. Critics question why a farmer like Van Warmderdam should receive public funds for a project that might have been built anyway. Indeed, Van Warmderdam says he had been trying to install such a system for nearly a decade before cap-and-trade began a couple years ago. He was stymied twice — not directly by financial issues, he says, but by problems with contractors. “It never made it to the building stage,” he said.
Two environmental groups, the and , sued California to try to block the use of offsets, which they argued lacked integrity and could be abused. Another environmental group, the , which has expressed confidence in the integrity of the cap-and-trade system’s verification system, has been helping California defend itself in court.
“It is not standard practice to install anaerobic digesters,” Judge Ernest Goldsmith . “Cost is the primary barrier to installing digesters and offset credits directly address this problem.” The California State Supreme Court is due to decide whether it will filed by Our Children's Earth.
“I see that some day they’re probably going to force you to put these things in,” he said.
Climate Central. The article was
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