Title: Presentacin de PowerPoint
1Side event _at_ CoP 11 Montréal, December 6th
2005 THE SUSTAINABLE FOREST PRODUCTS INDUSTRY,
CARBON AND CLIMATE CHANGE KEY MESSAGES FOR
POLICY-MAKERS
2Sponsoring Organisations
- WBCSD, the World Business Council for
Sustainable Development, a coalition of 180
global companies, including forestry and forest
products, united by a shared commitment to
sustainable development. - NCASI, the National Council of Air Stream
Improvement, an independent, non-profit research
institute that focuses on environmental topics of
interest to the forest products industry. - ICFPA, the International Council of Forest
and Paper Associations, is comprised of trade
associations in 43 countries representing
industries accounting for more than 90 of the
worlds paper and more than 50 of the worlds
wood production. -
3Agenda today - Objectives
- 1. Launch the new WBCSD publication
- The Sustainable Forest Products Industry, Carbon
and Climate Change Key Messages for
Policy-Makers - Advocacy tool to improve policy maker
understanding of our current and potential future
contribution to acheiving global climate goals - 2. Discuss and refine our Key Messages with the
experts panel and workshop participants - Policy makers, researchers, business, NGOs,
think tanks, media - 3. Broaden climate stakeholder understanding
of the Sustainable Forest Products Industry - ICFPA/WBCSD side event on Wed 7 December, 1800
2000 (6.00 8.00 PM) in the Banquet Room, Hotel
Places dArmes Forest Products Industry
Climate Action
4Agenda today - Format
- Moderator James Griffiths, Director, WBCSD
- Key note presenter (25 minutes)
- Robert Prolman, Director International
Environment Affairs, Weyerhaeuser Company - Respondents panel of experts (10 minutes each)
- Policy Maker Brian Emmett, Assistant Deputy
Minister, Natural Resources Canada - Environmental NGO Jeff Fielder, Climate Policy
Specialist, National Resources Defense Council - Technical Researcher Reid Miner, Vice President,
NCASI - Company Executive Karen Risse, Environmental
Business Services Manager, International Paper - Moderated Questions Answers from the floor
- Summary Comments
5Respondents panel
- Respondents panel of experts (10 minutes each)
- Policy Maker Brian Emmett, Assistant Deputy
Minister, Natural Resources Canada - Environmental NGO Jeff Fielder, Climate Policy
Specialist, National Resources Defense Council - Technical Researcher Reid Miner, Vice President,
NCASI - Company Executive Karen Risse, Environmental
Business Services Manager, International Paper - Two questions
- Respond to our key messages.
- Pose their own key messages.
6Climate Change Challenges and Opportunities
- The connections between our industry and the
global carbon cycle are complex - Hastily enacted climate change policies can have
unintended consequences on our future and
greenhouse gas emissions - Policies that reflect the interrelationships
between renewable forests, biomass energy and the
inherent role that forest products play in
reducing and avoiding greenhouse gas emissions
can contribute to progress in addressing the
global challenge of climate change.
7The Sustainable Forest Products Industry
- Responsible Managers of Carbon
- We use forest resources sustainably and
efficiently. - We supply products that store carbon, require
lower energy inputs during their life cycle than
most alternative non-wood products, and are
highly recyclable. - We are energy intensive, but meet most of our
energy needs with carbon-neutral biomass fuels. - We have made substantial progress over the past
several years, from a carbon point of view, but
we have a number of challenges. - There are policies that can create even more
progress, if crafted to reflect the
interrelationships that exist between our
industry and the global carbon cycle.
8Responsible Managers of Carbon
- Sustainably managed forests are a renewable
natural resource - Optimum forest management practices will be those
that ensure continued carbon sequestration in the
forest, provide wood fiber for biomass-based
products and carbon-neutral biomass fuels, and
protect the ecological values of the forest in a
balanced way.
9The forest industry is highly resource efficient
- Essentially all of the material removed from the
forest is used either in products or as biomass
fuel in the forest products industry. - In many industrialized countries over one-half of
the paper is recovered for recycling, allowing
forest fiber to serve repeated uses.
10Forest products
- Can usually be recycled, providing eco-efficient
use of the forest resource - In the end of their life cycle, can be used as
biomass fuels displacing fossil fuels. - In use, provide a climate benefit as compared to
products that are more energy and carbon
intensive.
11Forest products store carbon while in use and
then slowly return it to the atmoshpere
- Measured against common alternative building
materials, wood-based structures of comparable
thermal performance use less energy and have
fewer CO2 emissions. - Wood building materials require less energy to
manufacture.
12Wood product manufacturing carbon characteristics
- Uses little or no fossil fuel compared to pulp,
paper making. - Has the potential for playing an important role
as nodes in an expanded biomass infrastructure
aimed at supplying increased amounts of biomass
fuels to industry and society, because of their
dispersed locations - Uses purchased electricity, making it vulnerable
to increased electricity costs, and depending on
the source of the power, an indirect contributor
to greenhouse gas emissions - Relies on fossil fuel-based transportation of raw
materials and products.
13Pulp and paper manufacturing carbon
characteristics
- That uses virgin fibre usually derives a
significant amount of its energy from biomass - Has steadily improved its energy efficiency over
time - Uses large amounts of steam, which have allowed
pulp and paper mills to be a leading user of
highly efficient combined heat and power (CHP)
technology
14Forest Industry CHP Advantage
- Compared to conventional electrical power
generation systems, combined heat and power
systems produce twice as much usable energy from
the same amount of fuel.
15The Forest Products Industry is energy intensive,
but...
Biomass fuels provide most of the energy to
produce our products
- In developed countries, on average, the forest
products sector obtains more than half its energy
from biomass. - The forest products industry derives a greater
fraction of its energy requirements from biomass
than any other industry.
16Energy efficiency and technology
- Have allowed pulp and paper producers to improve
their ability to use biomass for fuel and reduce
their use of of fossil fuels. - But, we have the potential and the need to make a
greater contribution over time.
17But challenges remain for the industry
- Direct greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from fossil
fuel combustion in the forest-based industries
are approximately 264 million tons of CO2 per
year, which is about one percent of global GHG
emissions. Indirect emissions from purchased
power are estimated to be 130 to 180 million tons
of CO2 per year.
18Challenges for the industry
- The forest products industry is capital
intensive, making it difficult and expensive to
change technology to accommodate near-term policy
actions. - The best way for the forest products industry to
reduce emissions is through technological
innovation and accelerated capital stock
turnover. However, the industry is capital
intensive, with very long-lived capital equipment
(the typical predicted lifetime for a power
plant, chemical pulp mill or paper production
line is 25 years ). - Climate change-related policies like taxation,
licensing opportunities and procedures and
emissions pricing and trading all affect our
competitiveness. - The shape of future policies will determine
whether the affect is positive or negative, and
whether we capture the climate benefits of
forests and forest products.
19Challenges for the industry
- Dangers of increasing carbon storage in forests
via harvesting prohibitions - Reduce the availability of wood fiber for the
forest value chain and for biomass fuels - Increase the risk of loss of stored carbon via
fire or infestation - Increase the costs of forest products, causing
them to lose market share to competing products
that do not store carbon and are more energy and
carbon intensive.
20Challenges for the industry
- Risks of attempting to expand the use of biomass
fuels without ensuring commensurate increases in
virgin and recovered fiber supplies could create
competition for wood fibre, and - Reduce the availability and increasing the cost
of wood fiber for manufacturers of forest
products. - Result in the loss of market share to non-wood
based products that may be more energy and carbon
intensive. - Threaten the viability of forest product
manufacturing facilities that provide more
economic sustainability benefits than operations
that merely burn fiber for energy.
21Other policy considerations
- Active forest management practices, such as
competition control, fertilization, thinning and
prescribed fire, that can enhance forest carbon
sequestration. - The role of forests in supplying raw material for
biomass-based products and biomass fuels that
displace fossil fuels. - The very long investment horizons and uncertain
economic returns on investments in improved
forest productivity. - Both the industrys varied manufacturing
facilities, and the long value chain and high
recycling rates.
22Our Carbon Opportunities
- Because the forest products industry, while
energy intensive, is biomass-based, there are
significant opportunities to leverage
breakthrough technologies. Examples include - Development of forest-based bio-refineries to
convert forest biomass into gaseous and liquid
fuels and other commercial products. - Significant breakthroughs in the most
energy-intensive areas of forest product
manufacturing i.e., mechanical and chemical
pulping, pulp and paper drying and chemical
recovery.
23Our Carbon Opportunities
- The industry can become more energy efficient and
increase its use of biomass for energy. - The European pulp and paper industry has
volunteered for a 2010 goal of achieving on
average a 25 increase in biomass share of
on-site biomass primary energy consumption for
heat and power and an increase in biomass share
of total on-site primary energy consumption from
49 to 56. - The American Forest and Paper Association has
taken on a goal of reducing the greenhouse gas
intensity (i.e., a reduction in greenhouse gas
emissions per ton of production) of its
membership by 12 by 2012.
24Our Carbon Opportunities, Continued
- Canadas pulp and paper sector cut greenhouse gas
emissions by 22 during the 1990-2000 period
while expanding output by a similar magnitude. In
November 2003 it became the first industry in
Canada to sign a Memorandum of Understanding with
the federal government committing to further
emissions reductions in the 2008-2012 period as
part of Canadas plan for reaching its targets
under the Kyoto Protocol. - The Japan Paper Association has targeted a 13
reduction in energy intensity and a 10 reduction
in CO2 emissions intensity by 2010, compared to
1990 levels.
25Our Policy Recommendations
- The forest products industry supports the ongoing
recognition of biomass as a low-impact, renewable
and CO2 neutral energy source. The many benefits
of biomass-based products and fuels can only be
realized if public policies promote the
development of adequate supplies of wood and
recovered fiber - The use of biomass as a carbon neutral energy
source must be balanced against the economic,
social and environmental benefits of using this
resource within the forest products value chain - Incentives for the development and deployment of
biomass-based technologies (such as biomass
gasification) are needed to make our industry
energy self-sufficient and potentially a net
supplier of renewable energy - Government policies can help reduce the cost of
capital through lower interest rates, tax
incentives and accelerated depreciation
26Our Policy Recommendations, Continued
- The many benefits of combined heat and power
production are well known throughout the forest
products industry, therefore regulatory barriers
that discourage facilities from maximizing
combined heat and power potential should be
removed - Additional forestbased carbon sequestration
should be carefully considered to avoid
unintended consequences, such as the withdrawal
of productive forests from the forest products
value chain, or artificial pricing of limited
forest resources - The carbon removed from the atmosphere and
sequestered in forest products throughout their
useful lives should be more fully recognized, as
should the carbon and energy attributes of forest
products compared to competing products.
27Summary
- The Sustainable Forest Products Industry is a
Responsible Manager of Carbon - Sustainable managed forests are a renewable
natural resourse - We are energy intensive, meet most of our needs
with carbon neutral biomass fuels and are
increasing biomass fuel energy efficiency - We are highly resource efficient forest fiber
for products and fuel - Our products store carbon
- Our products are high recylable and forest fibre
can be repeatable reused - as products or energy - We are part of the solution to climate change
- Avoid unintended policy impacts that limit our
ability to contribute to the worlds climate
goals
28Respondents panel
- Respondents panel of experts (10 minutes each)
- Policy Maker Brian Emmett, Assistant Deputy
Minister, Natural Resources Canada - Environmental NGO Jeff Fielder, Climate Policy
Specialist, National Resources Defense Council - Technical Researcher Reid Miner, Vice President,
NCASI - Company Executive Karen Risse, Environmental
Business Services Manager, International Paper - Two questions
- Respond to our key messages.
- Pose their own key messages.
29 Questions Answers www.wbcsd.org
30Summary
- The Sustainable Forest Products Industry is a
Responsible Manager of Carbon - Sustainable managed forests are a renewable
natural resourse - We are energy intensive, meet most of our needs
with carbon neutral biomass fuels and are
increasing biomass fuel energy efficiency - We are highly resource efficient forest fiber
for products and fuel - Our products store carbon
- Our products are high recylable and forest fibre
can be repeatable reused - as products or energy - We are part of the solution to climate change
- Avoid unintended policy impacts that limit our
ability to contribute to the worlds climate
goals