Abstract

As the global food system contributes significantly to global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, understanding the sources of GHG emissions embodied in different components of food systems is important. The collapse of the Soviet Union triggered a massive restructuring of the domestic food systems, namely declining consumption of animal products, cropland abandonment, and a major restructuring of agricultural trade. However, how these complex changes have affected global GHG emissions is uncertain. Here, we quantified the net GHG emissions associated with changes in the former Soviet Union’s food systems. Changes in food production, consumption, and trade together resulted in a net emissions reduction of 7.61 Gt carbon dioxide equivalents from 1992 to 2011. For comparison, this corresponds to one quarter of the CO2 emissions from deforestation in Latin America from 1991 to 2011. The key drivers of the emissions reductions were the decreasing beef consumption in the 1990s, increasing beef imports after 2000, mainly from South America, and carbon sequestration in soils on abandoned cropland. Ongoing transformations of the food systems in the former Soviet Union, however, suggest emissions will likely rebound. The results highlight the importance of considering agricultural production, land-use change, trade, and consumption when assessing countries emissions portfolios. Moreover, we demonstrated how emissions reductions that originate from a reduction in the extent and intensity of agricultural production can be compromised by increasing emissions embodied in rising imports of agricultural commodities.

Highlights

  • With approximately a quarter of total anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, the global food system is a key driver of climate change (Smith et al2014)

  • Based on an index decomposition approach, we identified the most important socio-economic drivers contributing to changing GHG emissions embodied in food consumption inside the former Soviet Union (FSU) after 1991

  • To assess the contribution of changing emission intensity caused by international trade to the changes of the emissions embodied in consumption of livestock products, we compared the results of an index decomposition analysis with trade to a scenario without trade

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Summary

21 June 2019

Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI. Florian Schierhorn1 , Thomas Kastner2,3 , Tobias Kuemmerle4,5 , Patrick Meyfroidt6,7 , Irina Kurganova8, Alexander V Prishchepov9,10 , Karl-Heinz Erb3 , Richard A Houghton11 and Daniel Müller1,4,5 Keywords: carbon sequestration, telecoupling, trade, food’s carbon footprint, former Soviet Union Supplementary material for this article is available online

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