Farming Africa’s wet savannahs would have a high climate cost, study warns
As the global population rises, some scientists have suggested that Africa’s wet savannahs could be ideal for growing the extra crops needed to meet the growing demand for food and bioenergy.
But it isn’t quite the solution it seems, according to new research. The idea that Africa can provide food and biofuels while keeping emissions low “does not add up”, the researchers say.
§ The wet savannah
‘Wet savannah’ describes warm, tropical areas areas that are wet enough to support crops and aren’t covered with dense forest. Africa is home to around half of the world’s wet savannah. Much of it is found in the Guinea Savannah, which makes up around a third of sub-Saharan Africa.
The Guinea Savannah covers all the coloured areas on the map. The dark greens show areas with more dense vegetation, and the reds show areas already used for farming. Source: Searchinger et al. (2015).
Past studies have suggested that turning Africa’s wet savannah into cropland could be a potential solution for meeting global food and energy demand, the researchers say.
For example, a 2009 World Bank and United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) report described the Guinea Savannah as “one of the world’s largest underused agricultural land reserves”, with around 400 million hectares available to convert into farmland.
But the new paper, published in Nature Climate Change, says that these studies underestimate the environmental impact of converting the land for farming.
While the World Bank and FAO acknowledge the effect on biodiversity, they do not consider the amount of carbon that would be released, the researchers say.
‘Lower cost is not low cost’
When land is cleared and cultivated, carbon dioxide is released into the atmosphere from the soil, and the plants, shrubs and trees that grow there. The more densely the land is packed with vegetation, the more carbon is released when it is cleared.
Previous studies assume that Africa’s wet savannahs are ripe for cultivation because they aren’t covered by trees. The new study’s lead author Dr Timothy Searchinger, a research scholar at Princeton University, tells Carbon Brief:
So, the researchers set about working out how much of Africa’s wet savannahs could be converted to cropland without large emissions of carbon dioxide.
Low carbon option
The researchers used a crop simulation model to estimate how much maize and soybean could be potentially be grown on the Guinea Savannah. The model takes into account the soil and weather conditions, risk of failures, and how the crops are managed.
The scientists then worked out the proportion of the potential yield that could be grown in a ‘low carbon’ way. They define ‘low carbon’ as emitting a third less carbon than the global average emissions for converting land for farming.
The study works out the carbon emitted per ton of food produced, rather than the traditional method of measuring emissions by area of land cleared. This is a more precise way of measuring the food gains against the environmental costs of carbon emissions, the researchers say.
You can see their results on the map below. Just 2% of the Guinea Savannah met the low carbon criteria for growing maize (yellow areas), with around 11% suitable for soybean (light green).
Payback time
Previous studies also suggested the Guinea Savannah could be used to grow biofuel crops. A biofuel is any form of energy derived from plants or animal waste. Crops such as long-lasting grasses can be fermented to create ethanol and then blended with petrol for use in cars, thus reducing the amount of fossil fuels used.
The researchers used the same crop model to test growing these grasses rather than a food crop. The researchers calculated how many years of growing biofuels it would take to payback the carbon emitted when the land was converted for farming.
The map below shows that for around half of the Guinea Savannah, it would take over 50 years of growing biofuels to save the same amount of carbon dioxide that was emitted when the land was cleared (see orange and red areas).
Only 0.6% of the land would payback the carbon within 10 years (navy blue areas), which is the standard set by the European Union, the researchers say.
Carbon payback times (in years) for growing grasses for producing ethanol. Source: Searchinger et al. (2015).
Rob Bailey, research director at Chatham House, tells Carbon Brief that the biofuel finding is particularly important:
Growing demand
Previous studies have overestimated the potential for low carbon cropland in the wet savannahs, the researchers conclude.
But for sub-Saharan Africa to be able to feed its growing population at improved nutrition levels, overall food production will need to quadruple by 2050, the study notes. So what are the alternatives?
Some expansion of cropland is probably necessary, but the focus should be on boosting yields and limiting demand for biofuels and meat worldwide, Searchinger says.
Bailey agrees that reducing meat demand could make a big difference:
But the question is broader than the competing demands of food, energy and environmental concern, says Bailey. Development is also a key objective, and improvements in farming practice and technology would help Africa meet its food needs without the need to expand farmland unsustainably.