T
Tas Thamo
Researcher at University of Western Australia
Publications - 12
Citations - 365
Tas Thamo is an academic researcher from University of Western Australia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Greenhouse gas & Agriculture. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 12 publications receiving 281 citations.
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Assessing costs of soil carbon sequestration by crop-livestock farmers in Western Australia
TL;DR: In this article, the costeffectiveness of alternative land-use and land-management practices that can increase soil carbon sequestration is analysed by integrating biophysical modelling of carbon sequestering with whole-farm economic modelling.
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Does growing grain legumes or applying lime cost effectively lower greenhouse gas emissions from wheat production in a semi-arid climate?
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated if including a grain legume in a cropping rotation, and/or applying agricultural lime to increase the pH of an acidic soil, decreased greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from wheat production in a semi-arid environment by conducting a streamlined life cycle assessment analysis that utilized in situ GHG emission measurements, rather than international default values.
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Climate change impacts and farm-level adaptation: Economic analysis of a mixed cropping–livestock system
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the effects of climate change on agricultural profitability and found that profit margins were much more sensitive to climate change than production levels (e.g., yields).
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Challenges in developing effective policy for soil carbon sequestration: perspectives on additionality, leakage, and permanence
Tas Thamo,David J. Pannell +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss significant challenges in meeting these requirements, including some not previously recognized, and discuss how, in the case of sequestration, revisions to the additionality of sequestering practices should apply not just to the future, but in theory, also retrospectively.
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Measurement of greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture: Economic implications for policy and agricultural producers
TL;DR: In this paper, the consequences of three different methods for measuring on-farm emissions: national accounting methods, an amended version of those methods and use of best-available local data are explored.