Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems (May 2023)

How good is the data for tracking countries’ agricultural greenhouse gas emissions? Making use of multiple national greenhouse gas inventories

  • Kyle M. Dittmer,
  • Eva Wollenberg,
  • Eva Wollenberg,
  • Eva Wollenberg,
  • Milo Cohen,
  • Cecelia Egler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fsufs.2023.1156822
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Tracking agriculture and land-use greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions is necessary to inform global climate policy, yet UNFCCC country-reported data and three independent global databases show inconsistent estimates of countries’ emissions. Data for developing countries are particularly inconsistent, yet also collectively the largest source of emissions. Here, we provide transparency about available country-level emissions data for agriculture and related land use and characterize their data quality and consistency to enable better understanding of available data and tracking of climate change mitigation. We call for increased consistency in official national agricultural GHG inventory data and transparency about the differences among scientific data sources to enable decision makers to track progress, set priorities and manage emissions.

Keywords