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Study finds rice paddy emissions doubled in 60 years

Global rice paddy greenhouse gas emissions doubled from 19 to 40 million tons COโ‚‚ equivalent (1961โ€“2021) due to expanded flooded farming, now 1.5% of human-caused emissions. Scaling alternate wetting

Global rice paddy greenhouse gas emissions have doubled during the past six decades, study shows
Phys.org โ€” 26 June 2026
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Global rice paddy greenhouse gas emissions have more than doubled over the past six decades, driven by expanded farming and outdated irrigation method

Read Full Story at Phys.org โ†’
โšก Quickyla Analysis Original editorial context โ€” not sourced from the article above

Why This Matters

The doubling of rice paddy emissions isn't just a footnote in agricultural climate dataโ€”it underscores a critical blind spot in global decarbonization efforts. Rice, a staple for over half the world's population, has quietly become a major methane emitter, challenging the assumption that plant-based foods are inherently low-carbon. This shift forces policymakers to confront an uncomfortable reality: feeding the planet sustainably may require rethinking some of humanity's oldest farming practices.

Background Context

Rice cultivation evolved over millennia as a water-intensive system, but its greenhouse gas footprint only became measurable with modern climate science. The Green Revolution's push for high-yield varieties in the mid-20th century accelerated flooded field expansion, turning rice paddies into methane factories. Meanwhile, international climate agreementsโ€”like the Paris Accordโ€”have largely overlooked methane from agriculture, focusing instead on fossil fuels and industrial emissions, leaving a gaping policy void.

What Happens Next

The next decade will determine whether rice emissions become a climate success story or another intractable problem. Pilot programs testing alternate wetting and drying techniques show promise, but scaling them globally faces hurdles: water scarcity in key regions, resistance from farmers accustomed to flooded fields, and the absence of strong financial incentives. Watch for whether major rice exporters like India and Thailand adopt these methodsโ€”or if the world accepts this as an unavoidable cost of food security.

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