Limited potential of no-till agriculture for climate change mitigation
The Emissions Gap Report 2013 from the United Nations Environment Programme restates the claim that changing to no-till practices in agriculture, as an alternative to conventional tillage, causes an accumulation of organic carbon in soil, thus mitigating climate change through carbon sequestration. But these claims ignore a large body of experimental evidence showing that the quantity of additional organic carbon in soil under no-till is relatively small: in large part apparent increases result from an altered depth distribution. The larger concentration near the surface in no-till is generally beneficial for soil properties that often, though not always, translate into improved crop growth. In many regions where no-till is practised it is common for soil to be cultivated conventionally every few years for a range of agronomic reasons, so any soil carbon benefit is then lost. We argue that no-till is beneficial for soil quality and adaptation of agriculture to climate change, but its role in mitigation is widely overstated.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Open Access | Not Open Access |
| Additional information | Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security programme of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research |
| Keywords | RRES175, 175_Climatology, 175_Soil science, 175_Agroecology |
| Project | Delivering Sustainable Systems (SS) [ISPG], Cropping Carbon (CC) [ISPG], Movement and spatial ecology in agricultural landscapes, Quantifying Sustainable Systems, Maximising carbon retention in soils |
| Date Deposited | 05 Dec 2025 09:49 |
| Last Modified | 19 Dec 2025 14:35 |
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