Title: Maine Agriculture
1Maine Agriculture Forest GHG Inventory
- Maine Agriculture and Forest Working Group
- January 29, 2004
- CCAP
2Meeting Goals
- Understand current agriculture and forest carbon
inventory data, methods and assumptions - Clarify existing information
- Understand steps for refinement of inventory and
baseline - Recommend updates for next meeting
- Understand underlying causes for changes in
greenhouse gases (carbon stocks and flows for
forestry) - Identify promising mitigation options for carbon
savings
3Maine NESCAUM Inventory (12/17)
4Maine Agriculture Inventory
5Maine Agriculture Baseline
6Maine Agriculture Data Sources
- Inventory
- EPA State GHG Inventory Tool
- EIIP (1999) EIIP Volume VIII, Estimating
Greenhouse Gas Emissions, Emission Inventory
Improvement Program, Technical Report Series,
October 1999. - EPA (2001) Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas
Emissions and Sinks 1990-1999. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC,
EPA 236-R-01-001, April 2001. - EPA (2002) Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas
Emissions and Sinks 1990-2000. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC,
EPA 430-R-02-003, April 2002. - EPA (2003, In production) Inventory of U.S.
Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks 1990-2001.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington,
DC, EPA.
7Maine Agriculture Data Sources
- Inventory
- EPA State GHG Inventory Tool (continued)
- IPCC (1997) Revised 1996 IPCC Guidelines for
National Greenhouse Gas Inventories Reference
Manual, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change. United Kingdom, 1997. - Schueneman, Thomas, Agricultural Extension Agent
for Palm Beach County, Florida. (561) 996-1655. - USDA (2001), Published Estimates Database. U.S.
Department of Agriculture, National Agriculture
Statistics Service, Washington, DC,
lthttp//www.nass.usda.gov81/ipedb/gt. - Baseline
- Historical 1990-2000 trend projected to 2020
8Maine Agriculture Estimation Methods
- Carbon Accounts and Carbon Coefficients
- Agricultural Soils
- Manure Management
- Enteric Fermentation
- Agricultural Residue Burning
- Direct calculations of potential actions
9Maine Agriculture Assumptions
- No change in land use or land cover trends from
1990-2000 period - No significant change in technology trends
- No new federal policies
- No change in rates or types of management
practices - No change in productivity from climate impacts
10Maine Forest Inventory
11Maine Forest Inventory Data Sources
- USFS Forest Inventory Assessment (FIA) for Maine
Forest Service - Several thousand permanent sample plots in Maine
- 1983, 1995, 2001 (partial)
- Data now on five year collection cycle
- Forest area, composition and volume
- Growth, removals and mortality
12Maine Forest Inventory Estimation Methods
- FORCARB model developed by USFS
- Carbon Accounts and Carbon Coefficients
- Tree Biomass
- Understory Biomass
- Forest Floor
- Coarse Woody Debris
- Soil
- Wood Products
13Maine Forest Baseline Estimation Methods
- Advanced modeling of forest systems and uses
- FORCARB forest system (with Maine data)
- UFOREM urban forests (with Maine data)
- HARVCARB wood products (with Maine data)
- Simplified methods
- Linear extrapolation of inventory
- Educated guesses and technical consensus
14Maine Forest Inventory Empirical Assumptions
- FORCARB1 (Birdsey and Heath 2003) and FORCARB2
(Heath, et al. 2003) - Differences between Carbon Accounts (carbon
pools) - Tree biomass, understory biomass, forest floor,
coarse woody debris, soil, wood products - Carbon Coefficients for each
- Options for refinement with local data and
assumptions
15Tree Biomass
- Birdsey and Heath, 2003
- Used FIA standard biomass equations (Cost et al.
1990) - Live and dead trees combined
- Root ratios for softwoods and hardwoods
- Volume-to-carbon conversion factors by region and
forest type - Historical estimates from conversion of RPA
volume estimates to mass
16Tree Biomass
- Heath, et al. 2003
- Used nationally consistent biomass equations
(Jenkins et al. 2002) - Live and dead trees separate
- Root ratios for 10 species groups
- Volume-to-carbon conversion factors by region,
species, and size class (Smith et al. 2002) - Historical estimates from conversion of RPA
volume estimates to mass
17Tree Biomass
18Tree Biomass
- Options for Refinement
- If tree biomass equations are available for
Maine, they can be substituted
19Understory Biomass
- Birdsey and Heath, 2003
- Percent of overstory biomass by forest type and
age class - Heath, et al. 2003
- Percent of overstory biomass by forest type and
age class - Options for refinement
- If understory biomass equations are available for
Maine, they can be substituted
20Understory Biomass
21Forest Floor and Coarse Woody Debris
- Birdsey and Heath, 2003
- Forest floor and coarse woody debris combined
- Used data in Vogt et al. (1986)
- Single estimate by region and forest type,
weighted by age class distribution - Simple dynamics for harvesting and land-use
change - CWD decay functions from Turner et al. 1995 (used
to explicitly estimate logging debris) - Historical estimates calculated as a function of
RPA volume
22Forest Floor
- Heath, et. al 2003
- Developed equations by region, forest type, and
age class (Smith and Heath 2002) - Data from a comprehensive literature review
(Smith and Heath 2002) - Historical estimates calculated as a function of
region and forest type
23Coarse Woody Debris
- Heath, et. al 2003
- Simulated ratio of woody residue to live tree C
from growth, management, and harvest (Chojnacky
and Heath 2002) - Data from research studies
- Separate relationships by region, forest type,
and owner - CWD decay functions from Turner et al. (1995)
- Historical estimates calculated as a function of
region and forest type
24Forest Floor and Coarse Woody Debris
25Forest Floor and Coarse Woody Debris
- Options for Refinement
- Depends on availability of data for Maine
- Possible sources include Forest Health Monitoring
data and Heath and Chojnacky (2001)
26Soil
- Birdsey and Heath, 2003
- Multiple regression procedure to estimate soil C
as a function of temp, precip data from Post et
al. (1982) - Type shifts affect soil C in projections only
- Assumed clearcut affected soil C in the South
- Simple dynamics for land-use change projections
beginning in 1980 (1987) - Assumptions for land-use change effects from
Houghton et al. (1983, 1985) - Soil C changes deducted for land-use change
27Soil
- Heath, et. al 2003
- Soil C based on U.S. soil map with GIS overlay of
forest types - Type shifts affect historical and projected soil
C - Assumed clearcut did not affect soil C anywhere
- Simple dynamics for land-use change beginning in
1909 - Data for land-use change effects from Post and
Kwon (2001) - Soil C changes deducted for land-use change
28Soil
29Soil
- Options for Refinement
- Depends on availability of data for Maine
- Information on land-use-change is especially
important for defining (1) transitions among
forest types, and (2) movement of carbon in or
out of the forest sector
30Wood Products
- Birdsey and Heath, 2003
- Used model results from Row and Phelps (1991)\
- Based on wood production from all domestic
sources (by state) - Historical data started in 1980 (1952)
- Heath, et. al 2003
- Used model results from Skog and Nicholson (1998)
- Based on wood production from all domestic
sources - Historical data started in 1900
31Wood Products
32Wood Products
- Options for Refinement
- Depends on availability of data for Maine
33Next Steps?
- Inventory
- Baselines
- Options
- Next WG meeting