Browse data: PolicyIntervention
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- Application (39)
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Agricultural land use (Land use) (4) · Animal husbandry (Food) (1) · Climate mitigation (Climate) (2) · Crop production (Food) (1) · Eco goods and services (NB) (1) · Energy demand (Energy) (1) · Energy system (Energy) (1) · Food demand (Food) (2) · Forestry (Land use) (2) · GHG emissions (Climate) (1) · Land cover (NB) (1) · Nutrition and diet (Food) (1) · Other energy (Energy) (1) · Other land use (Land use) (1) · Other nature and biodiversity (NB) (1) · Terrestrial biodiversity (NB) (1) · Trade (Food) (1)
Showing below up to 12 results in range #1 to #12.
- Afforestation policies (Increasing forest area to sequester CO2 in biomass which helps to achieve stringent climate targets., Component: Agricultural economy)
- Agricultural trade policies (Changes in agricultural trade policies are applied to the corresponding quota (export or import quota) or border taxes., Component: Agricultural economy)
- Changes in consumption and diet preferences (Interventions that target consumption changes or changes in dietary preferences, Component: Agricultural economy)
- Changes in crop and livestock production systems (General changes in crop and livestock production systems, e.g. more efficient production methods to create higher production per unit of input, or other systems like organic farming, Component: Agricultural economy)
- Closing the yield gap (This intervention increases actual yields (reduces the gap between potential and actual yields), usually realized by better management., Component: Agricultural economy)
- Expanding Reduced Impact Logging (Increasing the share of produced wood yielded with Reduced Impact Logging (RIL) practices instead of conventional logging practices., Component: Forest management)
- Implementation of biofuel targets (Policies to enhance the use of biofuels, especially in the transport sector. In the Agricultural economy component only 'first generation' crops are taken into account. The policy is implemented as a budget-neutral policy from government perspective, e.g. a subsidy is implemented to achieve a certain share of biofuels in fuel production and an end-user tax is applied to counterfinance the implemented subsidy., Component: Agricultural economy)
- Increase forest plantations (Increase the use of wood from highly productive wood plantations instead of wood from (semi-) natural forests., Component: Forest management)
- More sustainable forest management (Sustainable forest management aims for maintaining long-term harvest potential and good ecological status of forests (e.g. the nutrient balance and biodiversity). This can be implemented by (i) enlarging the return period when a forest can be harvested again; (ii) only using certain fractions of the harvested biomass and leave the remaining part in the forests., Component: Forest management)
- Non-CO2 taxation policies (Taxes greenhouse gas emissions in agriculture to achieve cost-optimal mitigation in the agricultural sector., Component: Agricultural economy)
- REDD policies (The objective of REDD policies it to reduce land-use related emissions by protecting existing forests in the world; The implementation of REDD includes also costs of policies., Component: Agricultural economy)
- Reduction of waste/losses (Reduction of losses in the agro-food chain and waste after consumption., Component: Agricultural economy)