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The Viability of Cattle Ranching Intensificationin Brazil as a Strategy to Spare Land and Mitigate Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Published by:
Publication date
30/04/2011
Number of Pages
40
Language:
English
Type of Publication:
Working Papers & Briefs
Focus Region:
Latin America & the Caribbean
Focus Topic:
Land / Water / Resource Management
Type of Risk:
Weather & Climate related
Commodity:
Livestock
Source
http://www.dfid.gov.uk/r4d/PDF/Outputs/CCAFS/ccafs-wp-11-the-viability-of-cattle-ranching-intensification.pdf
Author
Bowman, M.; Cohn, A.; O' Neill, K.; Zilberman, D.
Organization
CGIAR

Recent research and policy on reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in Brazil suggests
that the least-cost, largest-scale mitigation option is for cattle ranchers to produce more on the
land they already use. The rationale is that cattle ranching intensification programs (CRIPs)
can speed yield-increasing technology adoption that delivers GHG benefits by sparing land to
prevent deforestation and allow the production of more biofuels and other agricultural
products. We draw on a literature review to assess the merits and viability of CRIPs in Brazil.
Support for CRIPs is based on a series of premises: intensive cattle ranching technologies are
already in commercial use; accelerating adoption is straightforward; increasing intensive
ranching can reduce cattle product prices; reducing cattle product prices can reduce pasture
area; reducing extensive cattle ranching in Brazil can deliver GHG benefits; CRIPs will
deliver environmental and social benefits; and that the GHG benefits from CRIPs will exceed
implementation costs. We argue for CRIPs trials as part of a broader effort to reduce several
key data and science gaps crucial for assessing the impacts of CRIPs.