Abstract

The need to balance agricultural production and environmental protection shifted the focus of Brazilian land-use policy toward sustainable agriculture. In 2010, Brazil established preferential credit lines to finance investments into low-carbon integrated agricultural systems of crop, livestock and forestry. This article presents a simulation-based empirical assessment of integrated system adoption in the state of Mato Grosso, where highly mechanized soybean–cotton and soybean–maize double-crop systems currently prevail. We employ bioeconomic modeling to explicitly capture the heterogeneity of farm-level costs and benefits of adoption. By parameterizing and validating our simulations with both empirical and experimental data, we evaluate the effectiveness of the ABC Integration credit through indicators such as land-use change, adoption rates and budgetary costs of credit provision. Alternative scenarios reveal that specific credit conditions might speed up the diffusion of low-carbon agricultural systems in Mato Grosso.

Highlights

  • The Federal Government of Brazil is aware of its great responsibility to combat climate change

  • The introduction of teak amplified the effect of ABC credit in our simulations, since it increased the total integrated system area by about 250,000 hectares when compared to the baseline [ABC] scenario

  • Credit from the ABC program has not been regarded as a crucial determinant of the adoption of integrated systems in Mato Grosso

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Summary

Introduction

The Federal Government of Brazil is aware of its great responsibility to combat climate change. During the 15th Conference of the Parties (COP15) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the government pledged to take domestic actions to substantially decrease its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. According to this pledge, national greenhouse gas emissions shall be reduced by 36.1–38.9% until 2020. This should not undermine the sector’s great economic and political importance, earning around 52% of the total national exports

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