Title: AN OPERATIONAL SYSTEM FOR DEFORESTATION ESTIMATION FOR CANADA
1AN OPERATIONAL SYSTEM FOR DEFORESTATION
ESTIMATION FOR CANADA
Donald G. Leckie Canadian Forest Service,
Natural Resources Canada Victoria, British
Columbia
2Forest/Deforestation Definition
- Forest
- Area 1 ha minimum area of forest
- Height 5 m at maturity
- Crown Closure 25 at maturity
- Deforestation
- Minimum Width 20 m tree base to tree base
- Clear permanent land use change
- Harvest not deforestation
3Requirements
- UNFCCC - greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions due to
deforestation annually 1990-present - thus need 1970-present deforestation area
- Kyoto Protocol - greenhouse gas emitted annually
2008-2012 due to deforestation from 1990 onward - thus need 1990 - 2012 deforestation
- Convert area and type of forest to carbon other
GHG emissions - Track carbon GHG on deforested land after
deforestation under the new land use (e.g.,
agriculture)
4Urban and Oil Gas Development
Oil and Gas
Suburban Development
5Forestry and Extraction
Road Building
Gravel Pit Expansion
6Agricultural Expansion
7Hydro Reservoirs
Large reservoirs flooded in the 1980s in north
Quebec
The Eastmain-1 reservoir flooded 2006 is 600km2
8Deforestation Analysis Flowchart
9Deforestation Monitoring Strata
10Area Sampled
1975-90 16.8 Mha 1990-2000 43.4
Mha 2000-2006 5 Mha Sampled from 264
Mha Plus 55.6 Mha N. Quebec
11Scaling for National Level Reporting
- Deforestation data are scaled from samples to
deforestation strata units, to 60 reconciliation
units then aggregated to 18 reporting zones -
12Areas of Full Cover Mapping 1990-2000
13Full EOSD/CTI Earthsat 2000 Coverage 1975
and 1990 coverages as well
14Circa 1990 Winter Landsat Imagery
Blue winter image frames 110
images Deforestation strata in background
15Circa 1990 Digitized Aerial Photography
Red - Federal Yellow -
provincial 70,000 photos Deforestation strata
in background
16Deforestation Sample Plot Design
17Steps
- Training, field calibration
- Interpretation mostly on contract with internal
QC - Real time QC by CFS
- Correction of interpretation biases, error types
- Full QC by CFS includes field checks
- Revision
- Final vetting
- Format checks before GIS processing
18Deforestation Interpretation Guide
- The Guide is our bible for mapping methods,
specifications and database structures - Standardized methods are used during mapping
- Revised based on new realities, interpreter
comments and suggestions
19Rules for mapping deforestation for different
scenarios (combinations of areas of unit "C",
lengths and width "g" and "w", and cases of treed
or non treed for areas A, B, C and D).
20Base Manual Interpretation
21Ancillary Data
- Roads
- Pipelines and well pads (complete coverage)
- Wooded vs non-wooded from provincial national
base maps - Pits and quarry license areas
- Forest management zones
- Parks
- Forest inventory (provinces)
- Potential future (population census block data,
911 emergency GIS database)
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24Event Interpretation
- Interpreter records pre-deforestation forest
types, post-D classes, confidence in
interpretation, request for validation/help - Omissions, commissions, attribution and boundary
errors, plus required field checks are noted in QC
25Quality Control
26Planned Flight Line and Targets
27Actual Flight Path and Photos
28Area of Field Validation (Saskatchewan Prairie
Fringe)
29Saskatchewan Validation Mission Fights (July 2004)
30Records Data
- Records data were used in part for
- - forest roads
- - hydro lines
- - hydro reservoirs
- - oil and gas pipelines
- - well pads
- Data are from published and internal reports and
individuals within responsible agencies - Records data analyzed to determine completeness
and to extract the portion being Kyoto Protocol
deforestation
31Uncertainty Assessment
- Expert judgment to determine omissions and
commissions (20), boundary errors (20) and
sampling errors (25) supported by pilots and
Monte Carlo sample design study - These errors are combined to solve uncertainty
- U (O/C2 D2 SE2)0.5
- or (.22 .22 .252)1/2 0.38 as a
preliminary estimate - Where O/C Combined Omission/Commission Error
- D Delineation Error
- SE Sampling Error
32Time Trend Interpolation
33Deforestation Estimates for Canada
34Deforestation by Industrial Class
- In normal years, D is dominated by agricultural
clearing with lower amounts of urban development
and forest roads
- When large hydro reservoirs are built, they
dominate the national total (for area)
35Number of Deforestation Events by Size Class
36Deforestation Area by Event Size Class
37Carbon Estimation
- NRCAN Canadian Forest Service
- D mapping, records extraction and compilation
- D event carbon estimation (CAT CBM-CFS3)
- D portion of NIR Report production
- Agriculture and AgriFoods Canada
- Post-D agricultural GHG calculation
- Environment Canada
- Assembly of estimates from different sectors
- Non-Agricultural Post-D GHG calculation
- Compilation of full D carbon estimates
- NIR Report production
38Deforestation GHG Estimates
39Principles
- Not practical or cost effective in Canada to map
T1 and T2 forest and compare - 4.3 million km2, ½ forested
- fine delineations needed
- small amount of deforestation
- Deforestation is both land cover and use
- many factors integrated, automated not
appropriate as primary identifying tool - Land cover classification comparison too
imprecise due to vagaries of classification no
or difficult land use attribution - Low resolution (e.g., MODIS, SPOT VGT) can not be
used successfully to identify deforestation or
zones with deforestation - Annual mapping not viable for Canada
interpolation over time acceptable
40Canadas National Deforestation Estimates Mapping
Scope
- 48 million ha mapped (1975-1990 1990-2000 or
both) - 25 interpreters from companies, provincial
mapping agencies and RD organizations - 3-5 main QC personnel in CFS
- 5-20 minutes to map reasonably complex 3.5 x3.5
km sample cells contract costs 30-40/plot 10
QC 40-50/plot - In total 258,864 ha of deforestation events
delineated - 54,827 events mapped
41Lessons Learned
- Interpreter training and experience key QC and
vetting important - Efficiencies and results suffer if steps are
bypassed or diminished - Circa 1990 winter imagery and digitized air
photos very useful - Too much reliance (faith in) ancillary data
yields problems - Imagery 5-10 years after deforestation useful to
confirm land use change (e.g. 2000 imagery for
1975-1990 deforestation) - Roads, power lines, pipelines near 20 m width
limit difficult to definitively determine width
criteria (i.e. gt 20 m) - Image quality important phenology, crop stage,
haze
42Conclusions
- Full methodology and approach is sound and a
keeper - Infrastructure of expertise, tools and methods
has been developed - For first time there is a national accounting of
deforestation - Improvements can be made
- Procedures framework established, will form the
foundation for deforestation estimation in Canada
throughout the KP commitment period and beyond,
ever evolving and adapting to new technology,
resource levels, institutional circumstances and
the lessons learned
43