NEWS RELEASE

Contact:
Jennifer Witherspoon, Environmental Defense Fund, (415)378-1985, [email protected]
Megan Davenport, Winrock International (501) 280-3076, [email protected]  

(Sacramento, Calif. – June 9, 2011) Environmental Defense Fund, in partnership with Winrock International, the California Rice Commission and the leading Arkansas rice industry associations and producers, will receive a $1.1 million USDA Conservation Innovation Grant (CIG) to demonstrate best practices for reducing greenhouse gas emissions from rice production in Arkansas and California.

Growers in Arkansas, the largest rice producing state, planted nearly 1.8 million acres in 2010 and growers in California, the second largest rice producing state, planted more than 550,000 acres. Working in these two states provides an opportunity to quantify methane emissions reductions as carbon offsets.

“This groundbreaking project is a great economic opportunity for rice farmers who already help feed the world,” said David Festa, vice president of both West Coast operations and the Land, Water and Wildlife programs for Environmental Defense Fund (EDF). “It will enable rice farmers to diversify their portfolio, so they can get paid—as they should be—for helping stabilize the world’s climate.”

EDF, the California Rice Commission, Applied Geosolutions, LLC, and TerraGlobal Capital, LLC, recently developed the first U.S. methodology to quantify greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reductions from rice production in California without negatively affecting yields. The GHG methodology is a framework for developing offset projects to sell credits on voluntary and compliance GHG markets. Removal of rice straw after harvest provides the largest mitigation opportunity to reduce emissions of methane, which has over 20 times the global warming impact of carbon dioxide. The methodology currently is under review by the American Carbon Registry (ACR) and the Verified Carbon Standard.

“Winrock is excited to partner with EDF and Arkansas rice producers on this important initiative,” said Annett Pagan, Winrock director, U.S. Programs. “Rice producers in Arkansas strive to improve yields, increase competitiveness and enhance habitat, particularly for waterfowl. It’s a win-win if producers can do all those things and also reduce GHG emissions. The CIG project will provide the needed on-the-ground demonstrations to prove this can be done practically and cost-effectively and that the revenue potential is real.”

California’s Global Warming Solutions Act (AB 32) creates an emissions trading market in California beginning in 2012 that allows regulated entities to use offsets for up to 8 percent of their compliance obligation, 220 million metric tons (MMT) from 2012-2020. Approval of a rice protocol, either as an additional early action crediting protocol or as a California Air Resources Board (CARB) compliance offset protocol, would enable GHG emission offsets created by rice producers in California, Arkansas, or any other U.S. state to be purchased by regulated entities with a compliance obligation under AB 32.

Current prices for offsets on the purely voluntary market range from $3-7/metric ton (MT) of carbon dioxide emissions (CO2e), while pre-compliance offsets approved by the California Air Resources Board are trading on the voluntary market at $7-10/MT CO2e, and are likely to rise further, tracking expected allowance prices.

“The California Rice Commission looks forward to pilot-testing a set of practices in the field that will help reduce greenhouse gas emissions and generate a limited amount of emissions offsets that can be used by other regulated industries in California,” said Paul Buttner, manager of environmental affairs at the California Rice Commission. “In doing so, we hope to collect useful information about how to make such programs as user-friendly as possible for our growers and to other agricultural groups interested in providing carbon offsets.”

One objective of this landmark demonstration project with rice producers in Arkansas and California is to analyze the project’s replication potential in other rice producing states, including Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri and Texas.

“This Conservation Innovation Grant allows EDF and our partners to work with growers in Arkansas and California to pilot carbon offset projects using an approved rigorous scientific protocol,” said Belinda Morris, California regional director of EDF’s Center for Conservation Incentives. “It holds great promise for U.S. rice farmers to make money on the California carbon market and to reduce methane gas emissions from rice production both in the United States and around the globe.”

USDA’s Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) uses CIG to stimulate development and adoption of innovative conservation approaches and technologies.

“We want to help farmers and ranchers make important and innovative contributions to reducing greenhouse gas emissions,” Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said during the grant announcement. “These grants are designed to test and verify exciting new approaches to greenhouse gas reduction that other conservation-minded producers will want to put to work on their operations.”

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Environmental Defense Fund (
edf.org), a leading national nonprofit organization, creates transformational solutions to the most serious environmental problems. EDF links science, economics, law and innovative private-sector partnerships. Visit us on Twitter @EnvDefenseFund and @EDF_CA, on our California blog California Dream 2.0, and on Facebook facebook.com/EnvDefenseFund.

Winrock International is a nonprofit organization that works with people in the United States and around the world to empower the disadvantaged, increase economic opportunity, and sustain natural resources. Since the 1990s, Winrock has been a leader in science-based GHG measurement and monitoring in the agriculture, land use change and forestry sectors. Winrock is headquartered in Little Rock, Ark. www.winrock.org.

One of the world’s leading international nonprofit organizations, Environmental Defense Fund (edf.org) creates transformational solutions to the most serious environmental problems. To do so, EDF links science, economics, law, and innovative private-sector partnerships. With more than 3 million members and offices in the United States, China, Mexico, Indonesia and the European Union, EDF’s scientists, economists, attorneys and policy experts are working in 28 countries to turn our solutions into action. Connect with us on Twitter @EnvDefenseFund