Title: Wood Products
1Wood Products Climate Change Policies -Tools
to promote wood as green building?
- The roles of wood in green building and green
building effects on the forest sector in the
UNECE region - 20 October 2008, Rome, Italy
by Sebastian Hetsch UNECE/FAO Timber Section
2Overview
- Current Climate Policy Framework
- Contributions of Wood Products to Climate Change
Mitigation - Accounting methods for HWP
- HWP accounting as a tool to promote wood?
31. Climate Policy Framework
- Forests and Climate Change
- Carbon sequestrations and storage in forests
- Wood energy substitutes fossil energy
- Wood raw material substitutes non-renewable
material and storing carbon for a limited time
41. Climate Policy Framework
- Forest worldwide a source of GHG (20)
51. Climate Policy Framework
- Kyoto Protocol
- Article 3.3 Afforestation, Reforestation,
Deforestation - Article 3.4 Forest management
- Wood products are not explicitly included
62. Contributions of Wood Products
- Two-fold Impact of Wood Products
- Substituting more energy- and emission-intensive
material - Storing carbon in products for a limited time
72. Contributions of Wood Products
- Substitution
- Implicitly included in Kyoto (if domestically
produced or in Annex-I countries) - Major effect for offsetting GHG emission, IF from
sustainable sources - Life Cycle Analysis (LCA) analyse effects
82. Contributions of Wood Products
- Storage
- Carbon stored in Wood products
- Delay of emission
- For a single product zero-sum game
- Positive GHG effects only on national level, if
increase in stocks - n
source S Rueter
92. Contributions of Wood Products
- Kyoto Protocol
- Wood Products currently excluded from accounting
- Possible consideration under post-2012 climate
regime - National reporting systems (Australia, Canada,
UK, USA)
103. Accounting methods
- Different approaches
- IPCC default (immediate emission)
- Stock change
- Production approach
- Atmospheric flow
- Who is liable for carbon emissions?
113. Accounting methods
- Modeling shows that carbon pool has increased
over last decades - Different approaches result in different results
(default approach most conservative)
12USA Estimated Emissions
Source Perez-Garcia, University of Washington
13Canada Estimated Emissions
Source Perez-Garcia, University of Washington
14Japan Estimated Emissions
Source Perez-Garcia, University of Washington
154. Tools to promote the use of wood?
- -gt no agreement on accounting yet
- Timing is crucial
- If included in post-Kyoto agreement, a proposal
is needed by mid-2009 - Agreement on accounting approach is needed
- Further negotiations in Poznan (Dec 2008)
164. Tools to promote the use of wood?
- Main goal has to be reducing total GHG emissions
(storage, substitution, efficiency) - adequate monitoring is needed
- Acknowledging that wood products can contribute,
when coming from sustainably managed forests
(which is the case in UNECE region) - Passing on potential benefits on a national
level difficult to implement
174. Tools to promote the use of wood?
- Not accounting for HWP could penalize wood
harvesting in countries accounting for forest
managment - When account for HWP it has to ensured that wood
is from sustainably managed sources
184. Tools to promote the use of wood?
- Carbon storage is a zero-sum game, unless the
storage increases - Wood promotion, green building policies can help
to increase the stock - HWP accounting would be an incentive for more use
of wood in long-lived material - Depending on carbon price
- Depending on how benefits are transfered to
consumers/producers - Depending on HWP accounting systems
19Further information
- Workshop on Harvested Wood Products in the
context of Climate Change Policies (9-10 Sep
2008) - www.unece.org/timber/workshops/2008/hwp/documents.
htm - Policy Dialogue on The Role of Wood Products in
Climate Change Mitigation (21 Oct 2008) - www.unece.org/timber/docs/tc-sessions/tc-66/hwp.ht
m
TOMORROW 1430
20Thank you for your attention!
- Contact
- Sebastian Hetsch, UNECE/FAO Timber Section
- email sebastian.hetsch_at_unece.org
- internet www.unece.org/timber
21Scenarios and their main elements
Basic principle of scenario building Scenarios
are based on elements of realistic policies as
regards harvesting, consumption, domestic wood
processing / production.
Optimized increment Mio. m3 Optimized increment Mio. m3 Kyoto optimized Mio. m3 Reduced tending Mio. m3 Baseline Mio. m3
Yield 9,2 9,2 8,5 3,0 5,9
Swiss harvest 90 90 75 - 40 20
Building Energy Building
Consumption
HWP (without pp) 4,5 80 2,5 0 4,5 80 1,9 - 24 3,0 20
Forest fuelwood 2,8 122 4,9 344 2,1 67 0,2 - 81 1,5 20
Foreign trade
Exports / Imports of wood products constant constant constant constant constant
22CO2 Sink/Emissions from HWP - Global Effects
Source Peter Hofer, Geopartner, Switzerland
23CO2 Sinks/Emissions from HWP - Effects in
Switzerland
Source Peter Hofer, Geopartner, Switzerland
24Global HWP Sink in Tg C
Source Perez-Garcia, University of Washington