Title: Adapting our Forests and Uplands to Climate Change
1Adapting our Forests and Uplands to Climate Change
- Jon Owen Jones
- Chair, Forestry Commission Wales National
Committee - September 2008
2Issues
- Climate Change - not just an adaptation role -
emissions reduction as well - Economics
- Trade-offs
- Ecosystem services
3Welsh woodlands
- Policy drives include
- One Wales - focus on native woodlands and carbon
sequestration - Environment strategy outcomes
- Woodland adaptation to climate change
- The wider role of trees timber in climate
change mitigation beyond just sequestration - Ecosystem services approach associated Axis 2
review - Renewable energy Route Map
4Ecosystem Services from forests
- The right forests can deliver across all the
service areas - Provisioning services - fibre for fuel timber
- Regulating Services - water regulation, erosion
control, GHG sequestration - Cultural services - spiritual, inspirational,
social - Supporting services - soil formation, habitat,
nutrient cycling, atmospheric oxygen
5One Wales
- The agreed programme of government for the
Labour/Plaid ruling coalition - We will provide support for indigenous
woodlands, including a tree for all new babies
and adopted children, helping to create a Welsh
National Forest of native trees to act as a
carbon sink.
6Some relevant analysis1
- There are 110,000 of native woodland in Wales or
some 38 of the total woodland resource - The remaining 62 is very un-native
- CO2 abatement by woodlands becomes much more
significant when they are managed for fibre
timber and the carbon is banked either
literally in products or via avoided emissions.
This effect is ongoing and cumulative - Soil carbon conservation is only an issue on true
deep peat soils - which are being deforested
anyway...
7Some relevant analysis2
- Recognised climate change driven woodland
adaptation strategies such as increased diversity
lower impact management are well-aligned to
some policy drivers e.g. landscape, tourism,
health well-being, environmental change BUT
less aligned to othersTrade-offs will be
necessary - e.g. Better adapted forests will probably provide
less CO2 abatement BUT they are likely to prove
more resilient and therefore have a better chance
of still growing in 100 years time...
8Model-based evaluation - CARBINE (graphs on same
scales to permit comparison)
Carbon reserve
Thin and fell
Continuous cover
Energy forestry
9So we have lots of this now
10and this...
11and less and less of this...
12We need more of this...
13and this...
14and this...
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15But this policy will result in less of this...
- Which equals carbon abatement as well as having
an economic development dimension
16Land use in Wales
17What role does this land have for managing the
trade-off...
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presentation for non-commercial profit as per
sites guidelines. All rights remain with
individual photographers
18What role does this land have for managing the
trade-off...
Footnote photograph has been copied from Flickr
Website www.flickr.com and is used within this
presentation for non-commercial profit as per
sites guidelines. All rights remain with
individual photographers