scholarly journals Forest carbon prospecting for climate mitigation

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lian Pin Koh ◽  
Yiwen Zeng ◽  
Tasya Vadya Sarira ◽  
Kelly Siman

Abstract Carbon finance projects that protect tropical forests could support both nature conservation and climate mitigation goals. Global demand for nature-based carbon credits is outpacing their supply, due partly to gaps in knowledge needed to inform and prioritize investment decisions. Here, we show that at current carbon market prices the protection of tropical forests can generate investible carbon amounting to 2.4 (±1.1) GtCO2e yr-1 globally. We further show that financially viable carbon projects could generate return-on-investment amounting to $77.5b y-1 in net present value (Asia-Pacific: $38.4b y-1; Americas: $33.4b y-1; Africa: $5.7b y-1). However, we also find that ~75% (1.24 billion ha) of forest carbon sites would be financially unviable for failing to break even over the project lifetime. From a conservation perspective, unless carbon prices increase in the future, it is imperative to implement other conservation interventions, in addition to carbon finance, to safeguard carbon stocks and biodiversity in vulnerable forests.

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lian Pin Koh ◽  
Yiwen Zeng ◽  
Tasya Vadya Sarira ◽  
Kelly Siman

AbstractCarbon finance projects that protect tropical forests could support both nature conservation and climate change mitigation goals. Global demand for nature-based carbon credits is outpacing their supply, due partly to gaps in knowledge needed to inform and prioritize investment decisions. Here, we show that at current carbon market prices the protection of tropical forests can generate investible carbon amounting to 1.8 (±1.1) GtCO2e yr−1 globally. We further show that financially viable carbon projects could generate return-on-investment amounting to $46.0b y−1 in net present value (Asia-Pacific: $24.6b y−1; Americas: $19.1b y−1; Africa: $2.4b y−1). However, we also find that ~80% (1.24 billion ha) of forest carbon sites would be financially unviable for failing to break even over the project lifetime. From a conservation perspective, unless carbon prices increase in the future, it is imperative to implement other conservation interventions, in addition to carbon finance, to safeguard carbon stocks and biodiversity in vulnerable forests.


2021 ◽  
Vol 51 ◽  
pp. 7-14
Author(s):  
Forrest Fleischman ◽  
Shishir Basant ◽  
Harry Fischer ◽  
Divya Gupta ◽  
Gustavo Garcia Lopez ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (10) ◽  
pp. eaax2546 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sean L. Maxwell ◽  
Tom Evans ◽  
James E. M. Watson ◽  
Alexandra Morel ◽  
Hedley Grantham ◽  
...  

Intact tropical forests, free from substantial anthropogenic influence, store and sequester large amounts of atmospheric carbon but are currently neglected in international climate policy. We show that between 2000 and 2013, direct clearance of intact tropical forest areas accounted for 3.2% of gross carbon emissions from all deforestation across the pantropics. However, full carbon accounting requires the consideration of forgone carbon sequestration, selective logging, edge effects, and defaunation. When these factors were considered, the net carbon impact resulting from intact tropical forest loss between 2000 and 2013 increased by a factor of 6 (626%), from 0.34 (0.37 to 0.21) to 2.12 (2.85 to 1.00) petagrams of carbon (equivalent to approximately 2 years of global land use change emissions). The climate mitigation value of conserving the 549 million ha of tropical forest that remains intact is therefore significant but will soon dwindle if their rate of loss continues to accelerate.


SEG Discovery ◽  
2001 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
DEBORAH LORD ◽  
MIKE ETHERIDGE ◽  
MARCUS WILLSON ◽  
GREG HALL ◽  
PHILLIP UTTLEY

ABSTRACT Research is underway to develop a range of methods for assessing and managing exploration risk, progress, and value. As part of the research, a collaborative project was undertaken by SRK Consulting, working with Placer Granny Smith (the operating company of the Granny Smith Joint Venture owned by Placer Dome Asia Pacific, 60%, and Delta Gold, 40%) and Placer Dome Asia Pacific, to review and quantify exploration success in a mature program that has delivered several mines. In particular, an objective was to develop a measurement technique that is more commercially robust and informative than the traditional “cost per resource ounce discovered” method. The project reviewed gold exploration over the past 13 years in the Laverton district of Western Australia. Placer Granny Smith has spent AUD$52 million (about US$30 million at recent exchange rates) defining 12 deposits with combined resources of more than 10 Moz (310 tonnes) of gold. Exploration centered on the Archean Granny Smith gold deposit, and was primarily targeted at outlining additional resources to feed through the Granny Smith mill. At an overall cost per resource ounce of less than US$3, this has clearly been a successful program. However, our analysis demonstrates that this figure fails to provide a complete value picture, and that the program could have delivered even greater value to the participating companies. While the quantitative results of the review are specific to the Laverton district, the methodology can be applied to near-mine, advanced, and grassroots exploration programs for any deposit style in any geologic environment. Key outcomes of the review are as follows: Measuring exploration success in terms of the net present value of the deposit outlined produces a markedly different and arguably more commercially realistic outcome than measuring it in relation to the average cost of resources defined.Early recognition and prompt drill testing of key targets is critical in optimizing opportunities and realizing exploration value. Indeed, the principal destroyer of value in exploration is spending too much time and money prior to drill testing the best targets in any area.Continual and robust ranking of exploration targets should be undertaken. Exploration should aim to rapidly identify and systematically test the best exploration targets, rather than systematically exploring the project areas. Especially in the current climate of a depressed resources sector, the exploration industry needs to compete aggressively for the investor’s dollar. The industry needs more robust and quantitative methodologies for measuring exploration effectiveness, and for informing management, investors, and shareholders of exploration risk, reward, value, and progress to discovery. The probabilistic methods described below provide such a framework.


Science ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 363 (6423) ◽  
pp. eaar3629 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew C. Hansen ◽  
Peter Potapov ◽  
Alexandra Tyukavina

Baccini et al. (Reports, 13 October 2017, p. 230) report MODIS-derived pantropical forest carbon change, with spatial patterns of carbon loss that do not correspond to higher-resolution Landsat-derived tree cover loss. The assumption that map results are unbiased and free of commission and omission errors is not supported. The application of passive moderate-resolution optical data to monitor forest carbon change overstates our current capabilities.


2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (13) ◽  
pp. eaay6792 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alice Favero ◽  
Adam Daigneault ◽  
Brent Sohngen

There is a continuing debate over the role that woody bioenergy plays in climate mitigation. This paper clarifies this controversy and illustrates the impacts of woody biomass demand on forest harvests, prices, timber management investments and intensity, forest area, and the resulting carbon balance under different climate mitigation policies. Increased bioenergy demand increases forest carbon stocks thanks to afforestation activities and more intensive management relative to a no-bioenergy case. Some natural forests, however, are converted to more intensive management, with potential biodiversity losses. Incentivizing both wood-based bioenergy and forest sequestration could increase carbon sequestration and conserve natural forests simultaneously. We conclude that the expanded use of wood for bioenergy will result in net carbon benefits, but an efficient policy also needs to regulate forest carbon sequestration.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yue Wang ◽  
Niven Winchester ◽  
Christopher J. Webster ◽  
Kyung-Min Nam

In this study, we estimate the economic impacts of China's official carbon-mitigation targets, in connection with Hong Kong's potential participation in a proposed national emissions trading scheme. We find that moderate intensity-reduction targets emulating China's pledged Paris Agreement commitment would incur much larger policy-compliance costs in Hong Kong (0.1–2.5% of baseline gross domestic product) than in Mainland China (0.1–0.7%) in each of the modeled years 2021 to 2030 when each economy operates its own independent carbon market. By comparison, an integrated carbon market enables Hong Kong to achieve the same reduction goal at up to 78% lower costs compared to an independent market, and this is achieved without significantly affecting the Mainland's economy. These savings in compliance costs for Hong Kong are greater when pre-integration local carbon prices in both economies are subject to a larger gap. Effectively, the cheaper pre-integration carbon prices in the Mainland indirectly subsidize the Hong Kong economy in the initial years of the integration scenario, buffering the policy shock. In sum, an integrated carbon market in China would improve overall efficiency at the national level, but the benefits are biased toward Hong Kong. This finding suggests that it is in the city's interest to play a more active role in cross-border collaboration on climate mitigation and emissions trading.JEL classification: C68, Q42, Q52, Q54


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wannes Hubau ◽  
Simon L. Lewis ◽  
Oliver L. Phillips ◽  
Hans Beeckman ◽  

<p>Structurally intact tropical forests sequestered ~1 Pg C yr<sup>-1</sup> over the 1990s and early 2000s, equivalent to ~15% of fossil fuel emissions. Climate-driven vegetation models typically predict that this carbon sink will continue for the remainder of the 21<sup>st</sup> century. However, recent plot inventories from Amazonia show a declining rate of carbon sequestration, potentially signaling an imminent end to the sink. Here we assess whether the African tropical forest sink is also declining.</p><p>Records from 244 multi-census plots across 11 countries reveal that the African tropical forest sink in aboveground live biomass has been stable for three decades, at 0.66 Mg C ha<sup>-1</sup> yr<sup>-1</sup>, from 1985-2015 (95% CI, 0.53-0.79). Thus, the carbon sink responses of Earth’s two largest expanses of tropical forest have diverged over recent decades. A statistical model including CO<sub>2</sub>, temperature, drought, and forest dynamics can account for the trends. Despite the past stability of the African carbon sink, our data and model show that very recently the sink has begun decreasing, and that it will continue to decline in the future.  This implies that the intact tropical forest carbon sink on both continents is set to end decades sooner than even the most extreme vegetation model estimates.</p><p>Published independent observations of inter-hemispheric atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> concentration indicate increasing carbon uptake into the Northern hemisphere landmass, offsetting a weakening of the tropical forest sink, which reinforces our conclusion that the intact tropical forest carbon sink has already saturated. Nevertheless, continued on-the-ground monitoring of the world’s remaining intact tropical forests will be required to test our prediction that the intact tropical forest carbon sink will continue to decline. Our findings were recently published in Nature (March 2020) and have important policy implications: given tropical forests are likely to sequester less carbon in the future than Earth System Models predict, an earlier date to reach net zero anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions will be required to meet any given commitment to limit the global heating of Earth.</p>


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document