Title: Tree planting to offset CO2 emissions
1Tree planting to offset CO2 emissions
- Danida Development Days 2008
- (Lars Graudal, Forest Landscape)
2- IPCC - Key mitigation technologies and practices
currently commercially available - Increased tree planting, including for bioenergy
- Better forest management and harvesting
- Reduced deforestation
- IPCC key mitigation technologies and practices
projected to be commercialized before 2030 - Tree species improvement to increase biomass
productivity and carbon sequestration. - Improved remote sensing technologies for analysis
of vegetation/ soil carbon sequestration
potential and mapping land use change
3Is tree planting an efficient means to offset CO2
emissions?
- Claimed as a possible quick fix for a couple of
decades, but - How large and how certain are the climate change
benefits really? - Of minor importance compared to the effects of
deforestation? better to eliminate the problem
at the source than to compensate? - What about the social and environmental impacts
of plantations?
41. How large and how certain are the climate
change benefits?
- Trees take too long to make a difference
- No, plantations are actually very efficient for
production - Trees do not last, so the value is not permanent
- Yes, but credits can be designed to take that
into consideration
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71. How large and how certain are the climate
change benefits?
- Forests may in fact contribute to global warming
- No net-cooling may be reduced in boreal and
temperate areas due to reduced albedo (Bala et al
2007) and methane production associated with
growth is minimal (Polglase et al 2008)
8Combined climate and carbon-cycle effects of
large scale deforestation
Albedo gt CO2 (Barren soils)
Boreal deforestation case (C) Cooling biophysical
effects of deforestation dominate the climate
response
Temperate deforestation case (D), Strong local
cooling responses, although the global-mean
response is near zero
Albedo CO2
Tropical deforestation case (E) The carbon-cycle
effects of warming overwhelm the biophysical
effects with slight local cooling
responses from the biophysical effects.
Albedo lt CO2 (Clouds)
G. Bala et al.. PNAS published online Apr 9, 2007.
9Polglase et al 2008
101. How large and how certain are the climate
change benefits?
- Carbon credits cannot be properly verified
- They can, but there is a need for standardisation
and regulation
11Economics of forest projects to create carbon
credits under Kyoto
- Conditions under which forest activities generate
CO2-emission reduction offsets at competitive
prices reviewed by van Kooten and Sohngen
(2007) - 68 studies of the costs of creating carbon
offsets using forestry - Baseline estimates of costs of sequestering
carbon are some US3280 per tCO2 - Intensive plantations in the tropics could
potentially yield positive benefits to society
(cf. also Benitez et al.)
122. Tree planting of minor importance compared to
the effects of deforestation better to
eliminate at the source than compensate
- Not a sustainable strategy
- Correct viewed in isolation. Of course energy
consumption and pollution needs to be addressed.
But tree planting can be an important element in
a sustainable strategy - Better to prevent deforestation
- Yes, but we need to do both. And reforestation
may help to reduce deforestation by producing
more on less land and provide substitution for
more energy demanding products.
13Plantations Climate Change
143. What about the social and environmental
impacts of plantations?
- Plantations are bad for biodiversity and the
local environment - May be true for some commercial plantations but
not for tree-planting overall and not for well
designed/regulated carbon credit supported
projects - Plantations often have negative social impacts
- Has nothing to do with tree planting per se.
All development projects should ensure that
social criteria are met.
15Combining carbon credit with social and
environmental forestry
- Some studies
- Carbon stock and sequestration potential of
traditional and improved agroforestry systems in
the West African Sahel (Takimoto et al 2008) - Small-scale forest carbon projects Adapting CDM
to low-income communities (Boyd et al 2007) - The potential of urban tree plantings to be cost
effective in carbon credit markets (McHale et al
2007) - Community and farm forestry climate mitigation
projects case studies from Uttaranchal, India
(Hooda et al 2007) - Smallholder agroforestry systems for carbon
storage (Roshetko et al 2005) - Potential carbon mitigation and income in
developing countries from changes in use and
management of agricultural and forest lands
(Niles et al 2002) - Carbon mitigation potential and costs of forestry
options in Brazil, China, India, Indonesia,
Mexico, the Philippines and Tanzania (Sathaye et
al 2001)
16Yes, tree planting is efficient to offset CO2
emissions
- A plantation of 100 km2 can absorb 4 million t of
CO2 over 20 years (20t/ha/year) - Tree planting offers wider environmental and
socio-economic benefits in particular outside
forests - Carbon markets can provide an important financial
subsidy/incentive to tree planting for various
purposes