The current research undertook a comprehensive examination of global research related to the use of measurement, reporting, and verification (MRV) techniques for quantifying and tracking greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from agriculture and livestock farming. Data were collected using a bibliometric analysis of 5340 studies published in the period (1990–2025) and a systematic literature review of 100 studies published in the period (2020–2025). The insights from the findings showed that four MRV techniques were broadly adopted across different regions: (1) inventory techniques (IPCC Tiers, national systems), (2) accounting at the project/product level (LCA, carbon footprint protocols), (3) MRV based on measurement and models (chambers, remote sensing, farm models, AI/ML), and (4) frameworks for governance and standardization (UNFCCC, Paris ETF, PAS 2050, etc.). The findings further revealed the impact of the MRV techniques on agriculture and livestock farming, showing that they facilitated the uptake of low-carbon practices. In agriculture, the MRV techniques showed that lower emissions emerged from mixed cropping, while in livestock farming, the emissions varied based on the feeding stage and type of diet used. However, various challenges arose in the adoption of MRV techniques where there was limited data related to GHG emissions, thereby reducing generalizability. In future work, there is a need for scholars to consider integrating the different MRV techniques to develop an understanding of the problem area.
Tsigkas et al. (Fri,) studied this question.