Title: Wood Usage for the Mitigation of Climate Change
1Wood Usage for the Mitigation of Climate Change
- Robert Beauregard
- Dean
- Faculty of Forestry and Geomatics
- LEaF London
- 24 January 2008
2Wood Usage for the Mitigation of Climate Change
- Gobal Warming, Current Status?
- Wood and the Boreal Forest Dynamics
- Conditions to be Respected for Wood to Contribute
to the Mitigation of Climate Change - Wood, Concrete and Steel from a Carbon Emission
Standpoint - A Wood-based Green Building
3Ice Cores from Vostok have been used to
Reconstruct CO2 Levels in the Atmosphere
4Levels of Atmospheric CO2 are Higher than at any
Time in the Last 430 000 yrs
Source Met Office http//www.metoffice.gov.uk/co
rporate/pressoffice/myths/figures.htmlatmos
5Concentrations of Greenhouse Gases
Source IPCC AR4 WG1 2007
6Temperature Variations over the Past 1000 years
Source IPCC AR4 WG1 2007
7Our Understanding of Climate Change from IPCC 4th
Assessment Report
- The understanding of climate evolution has
improved over the last few years, leading to a
very high confidence that the globally averaged
net effect of human activities since 1750 has
been one of warming - In 2006 the temperature was 0,46oC warmer than
the 1860-2006 average - Eleven of the last twelve years (1995-2006) rank
among the 12 warmest years in the instrumental
record (since 1850) of global air temperature - According to the IPCC forecasts, the temperature
in 2100, should increase on average within a
range of 1,4oC to 5,8oC.
Source IPCC-AR4-WG1 2007 and Kurz 2007
8The Global Carbon Exchange Situation
Source IPCC AR4 WG3 2007
9Main Causes of Anthropogenic Carbon Emissions
- Fossil fuel combustion
- Deforestation
- Concrete production
Source IPCC AR4 WG3 2007
10Forests, Trees and the Carbon Emission Issue
Atmospheric Carbon
End of the Plant Life
Carbon Fixation in Trees through Photosynthesis
(Sink)
Atmospheric Carbon
Carbon in Soil Biomass (Reservoir)
11Global carbon Stocks in Vegetation and Top 1 m of
Soil
Source IPCC Special Report on Land Use
http//www.grida.no/climate/ipcc/land_use/019.htm
table1-1
12Forest Management Dynamics in Relation to Carbon
Source Perez-Garcia et al. 2005
13Forest Management and Usage Dynamics in Relation
to Carbon
Source Perez-Garcia et al. 2005
14Long Term Impact of Concrete and Fossil Fuel
Substitution through Proper Forest Management
15Net change in forest area between 2000 and 2005
Red gt 0,5 Annual Decrease Green gt 0,5 Annual
Increase Grey Change rate below 0,5 per year
Source FAO 2006
16Canadian Forests as Sinks and Sources1990-2005
Source Natural Resource Canada
http//cfs.nrcan.gc.ca/news/544
17Trees, Wood and the Carbon Emission Issue
- Substituting concrete with wood is one way of
decreasing anthropogenic carbon emissions 1,1 ton
of C02/m3 of wood used (important) - Using wood in construction is one way of creating
a carbon sink for the building lifespan 0,9 ton
of C02/m3 of wood used (marginal systemic
positive impact) - Consuming wood to generate energy at the end of
wood product life cycle and thus substituting
fossil fuels is a key wood usage to be developed
(major cumulative systemic positive impact)
Source Frühwald and Sharai-Rad, 2003 and IPCC
AR4 WG3 2007
18The Conditions to be Respected to be Able to
Sustain Climate Change Mitigation
- Improve forest protection against insects and
fire - Use wood wastes, both from forest harvesting and
at the end of products life cycle, to produce
bioenergy and substitute fossil fuels - Implement public policies to prevent wood
products from getting into landfills - Stop deforestation and support afforestation,
everywhere but mostly in tropical countries.
19Construction Materials Compared on the Basis of
CO2 Emissions
Comparison of the CO2 emissions linked to the
design of a beam made of Aluminium, Steel,
Concrete and Solid Wood
Absorbed Emitted CO2
100 0 100 200 300
400
Kg kg
327
Aluminium
101
Concrete
Beam designed for Permanent load of 75
kg/m Exploitation load of 300 kg/m Span 7.5 m
76
Steel
101
6
Wood
Source Triboulot 2005
20 Source Canadian Wood Council Sustainable
Buildings Series no. 4
21Athena Institute Case Study
- A Toronto Single-family House
- 240 m3 building area
- Comparison of Wood, vs Concrete and Steel
- The Athena Environmental Impact Estimator
software was used - At the end of its Life Cycle, the house was
demolished and the wastes were sent to a landfill
Source Canadian Wood Council, Sustainable
Buildings Series, no. 4
22Embodied Effects Relative to the Wood Design
across all Measures
Source Canadian Wood Council, Sustainable
Buildings Series, no. 4
23Using Wood to Reduce CO2 Emissions
- Swedish research shows that building in wood
instead of concrete has the potential to reduce
net emissions by between 110 and 470 Kg of CO2/m2
of building area.
Source Gustavsson et al. 2006
24Green Building Certification and Wood
- In North America, LEED dominates Green Building
Certification activities - BREEAM has a more rationale certification
approach - Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) framework
25The Gene-H.-Kruger Building
- The Bioclimatic Approach
- Conciliate the biological requirements (peoples
comfort) with the climatic conditions - Use methods as simple as possible
- Wind orientation
- Natural light
- Light sinks
- Use of Solarwalls
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27Le Pavillon Gene-H.-Kruger
- Murs Solarwall et dispositifs doccultation
solaire
28The Gene-H.-Kruger Building
- A Green Building
- Wood is the only renewable building material and
it is a carbon sink - A water retention tank allows for night and day,
as well as seasonal energy exchange, and it
prevents fluvial utilities overflow - Energy consumption is reduced by 30
- Built according to LEED requirements but not
certified
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36Des questions?
- Nhésitez pas à communiquer
- avec nous si vous avez des
- questions!
- Visitez notre site web www.crb.ulaval.ca
37Des questions?
- Nhésitez pas à communiquer
- avec nous si vous avez des
- questions!
- Visitez notre site web www.crb.ulaval.ca
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39List of References
- FAO 2006. Global Forest Resource Assessment
Progress Towards Sustainable Forest Management.
FAO Forestry Paper 147320. - Frühwald W. and M. Sharai-Rad 2003 Comparison of
wood products and major substitutes with respect
to environmental and energy balances ECE/FAO
seminar Strategies for the sound use of wood,
Poiana Brasov, Romania, 24-27 March 2003 - Gustavsson et al. 2006. Carbon dioxide balance of
wood substitutioncomparing concrete and wood
frame buildings. Mitigation and adaptation
strategies for global change, 11667-691. - IPCC 2007 Fourth assessment report Working group
I report The physical science report,
http//www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/ar4-wg1.htm - IPCC 2007 Fourth assessment report Working group
III report Mitigation of climate change,
http//www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/ar4-wg3.htm - Kurz, W., 2007. Forests, Carbon and Climate
Change. Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest
Service, Ottawa, July 19th 2007. - NRCAN, 2007. Is Canadas Forest Carbon Sink or
Source? Science-Policy Notes, October 2007,
http//cfs.nrcan.gc.ca/news/544 - Perez-Garcia J. et al. 2005. An Assessment of
Carbon Pools, Storage and Wood Products Market
Substitution Using Life Cycle Analysis Results.
Wood and Fiber Science 37(2005)140-148 - Triboulot P. 2005. Penser forêt, agir bois Un
concept durable visant à réconcilier lavenir de
la forêt et lindustrie du bois. Conference UQAC,
Saguenay, Qc, 28 October 2005 - UK Public Weather Service, 2007.
http//www.metoffice.gov.uk/corporate/pressoffice/
myths/figures.htmlatmos
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