DUKE UNIVERSITY BEGINS WORK ON 10,000-ACRE CARBON FARM IN EASTERN N.C.
December 11, 2018
The new carbon
farm is located on coastal wetlands that formerly were drained for farming and
forestry. (Credit: Duke Univ.)
DURHAM, N.C. -- Duke University has acquired rights to
create a 10,000-acre "carbon
farm" on
privately owned land in eastern North Carolina.
When fully operational, the farm -- located in Hyde County
on a tract of pocosin peatlands formerly drained for agriculture -- could
potentially store enough carbon to offset much of the university's carbon emissions and help Duke
meet its goal of achieving carbon neutrality by 2024. Offset credits not used
by the university could be sold to others.
Carbon farming is a new approach for fighting global warming
that uses enhanced land management and conservation practices to increase the
amount of carbon that current or former agricultural lands pull out of the air
and lock away in their soil and vegetation.
"By rewetting and reverting these
former peatlands to their natural wetland state, we can significantly increase
their capacity for long-term carbon storage," said Curtis J. Richardson, director of the Duke University
Wetland Center, who spearheaded efforts to broker the deal with the landowner,
Hyde County Partners LLC, and will direct the restoration and management of the
10,000 acres for carbon storage at the Carolina Ranch location.
A drainage canal
abuts a drained peatland at Carolina Ranch. (Credit: Curtis Richardson.)
The freshwater marshland will also protect local groundwater
supplies and provide wildlife habitat as side benefits.
"This is a tremendous opportunity for
the state of North Carolina, Duke University and the private landowner to
create the largest carbon farm in the eastern United States, maybe the entire
country,"
Richardson said.
Researchers recently began a two-year pilot program on 300
acres of the land to identify the best ways to restore the former farm fields
to their original wetland state and measure and verify how much carbon their
saturated peat soil can store. If enough carbon credits can be generated at a
cost-effective rate, production will then expand to the other 9,700 acres.
DUWC researchers
measure peat depths at the carbon farm site. (Credit: Curtis Richardson.)
Carbon farming programs already under way in Australia, New
Zealand, Europe, Canada, California and the Midwest have shown that a 2.5-acre
plot of working rangeland or pasture can store more than one metric ton of
carbon annually.
Recent studies indicate that Southeastern pocosin peatlands,
such as those found in Hyde County, have much greater potential.
"A five-year study we did at Pocosin
Lakes National Wildlife Refuge in nearby Tyrrell County showed that these
peatlands have some of the highest net carbon credit values ever recorded," said Richardson, who holds a
faculty appointment as John O. Blackburn Distinguished Professor of Resource
Ecology at Duke's
Nicholas School of the Environment. "When restored to their natural state as shrub-dominated bog
wetlands, they can potentially store 10 to 15 times more metric tons of carbon
per year than drained or unrestored agricultural lands," he said.
"Left undisturbed, carbon in pocosins
can remain stored for millennia due to the unique natural antimicrobial
compounds that prevent the waterlogged peat from rapidly decaying and releasing
the carbon back into the atmosphere," Richardson said. "The presence of these compounds acts as a protective
mechanism or latch -- greatly reducing the release of greenhouse gases, even during
periods of drought."
In 2017, Duke University generated about 258,000 metric tons
of carbon emissions. If carbon storage rates at the new 10,000-acre farm are
similar to those recorded at Pocosin Lakes, "we could offset much of the university's carbon footprint in one fell
swoop,"
Richardson said. "Duke
will likely also have thousands of tons of carbon credits to sell."
Richardson said he and his team are already looking for
other landowners, industries or businesses that would like to partner or invest
in projects at similar sites.
He noted that spatial analysis by researchers at the Duke
Wetland Center shows there are hundreds of thousands of additional acres of
pocosin peatlands across eastern North Carolina and other southern coastal
states that have been drained for agriculture or forestry, or abandoned.
MORE
INFORMATION
Curt
Richardson talks carbon farming on the Green Guy sustainability podcast
Curt
Richardson talks about the project in an interview on North Carolina Public
Radio
Restoration
Work a Test for Carbon Farming. Coastal
Review Online, January 8, 2019