Harmonisation of carbon accounting

THE long-awaited Defra report, ‘Harmonisation of Carbon Accounting Tools for Agriculture’, has been published , providing much needed guidance for British growers and others in the potato supply chain on appropriate standards for carbon reporting.

 

The new report seeks to achieve greater accuracy of outputs from carbon calculation tools and presents standards to comply with when carrying out farm-level carbon assessments.

 

The food and farming industries have long sought guidance on carbon reporting.  

 

As part of the project 81 global carbon calculators were reviewed, with the report analysing in detail the six most relevant for UK farming.

 

Managing Director of knowledge and collaboration at Trinity AgTech, Dr Emily Pope, is optimistic about the impact of the report which she says denotes clear minimum standards for carbon accounting tools. Trinity Agtech’s Sandy navigation platform, denoted as calculator E within the report, has been endorsed by Defra.

 

“Farm-level carbon accounting is currently completely unregulated meaning there is significant divergence in calculation methodology and the resulting information; this is reducing trust, stalling decarbonisation efforts, and preventing proper recognition and reward," said Emily.

 

“One of the report's key recommendations is to adopt tools that present reliable data, in lin, which  with ISO standards 14064:2 and 14067 and the draft GHG Protocol Land Sector and Removals guidance which is supportive of the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi).

 

“Most businesses currently doing carbon accounting in the UK rely on old tools that adhere to outdated standards, such as PAS2050:2011, or methods that do not adhere to a recognised standard or protocol.

These tools fail to represent the complexity of modern agriculture.” 

 

Emily welcomed Defra’s acknowledgment that the poor alignment of old tools to modern standards is restricting the ability of farmers to access incentives and requirements around emissions reduction.

 

She said: “That’s why this report was so desperately needed, businesses need to understand which standards to align to and which software achieves these standards."

 

She added: “This starts at farm level. If we can’t improve profitability for farmers, producing food while delivering environmental improvements becomes untenable.”

 

You can read the full report here.

British Potato Review
Potato Review reports on new developments in all areas of crop production, storage, handling and packing, as well as scientific, technological and machinery innovations in the UK and overseas. We also keep readers abreast of consumer trends and legislation changes impacting on the industry.
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