Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDaniella Harrell Modified over 8 years ago
1
1 Questions Forest related outcomes of the UNFCCC meeting in Cancun (COP16) and EU’s position regarding forest in the ongoing climate change negotiations Explaining the reference level and its benefits Role of forest in achieving the EU’s climate change commitments: outcome of the informal expert group work and of the public consultation
2
2 Cancun outcome UNFCCC COP16 Overall targets: 2°C objective (assess whether 1,5°C possible) Pledges under Copenhagen Accord anchored (EU: 20-30) Fate of the Kyoto Protocol? LULUCF Decision LULUCF Draft Decision
3
3 LULUCF Decision LULUCF will count towards targets under KP No agreement for accounting method for forest management, but: –Force majeure rules –Submission of draft reference levels by 28 February – review process
4
4 LULUCF draft Decision Agreement reached between EU, Umbrella group (non-EU, non-US Annex I), G77&China – resistance from small island states and NGOs Mandatory accounting for forest management (in addition to afforestation, deforestation, reforestation) Reference level for forest management (projected, historical) Review procedure for RL Natural disturbance (force majeure) Quantitative limitation of contribution of FM (cap) Obligatory inclusion of harvested wood products (solid wood, paper) on the basis of standard decay functions or more refined approaches (no change of voluntary accounting for agricultural soils)
5
5 Way ahead Reference level: –Submission by 28 February –Improve analysis of what RLs should be, and associated mitigation potential – needed for final negotiations on commitments Confirmation of HWP agreement Force Majeure: –definition (single events vs collective) –trigger level Nature of forest management cap (exemption from cap if historical RL?) Status of special rules (compensation rule)
6
6 Accounting for forests No comparison with reference year (gross/net) Forest growth generates credits Capping of credits to 15% -> „free credit for most Parties“ -> limited/no incentives for mitigation Projections of carbon stock developments Only deviations from baseline count Force majeure (natural disturbances,compliance risks) Harvested Wood Products Cap? OldNew (EU, Umbrella, G77&China)
7
7 LULUCF trends cropland grassland forests (excluding afforestation and deforestation) reference year 1990 Source: IIASA cap
8
8 Shift in age class structure
9
9 Historical data from country ? Elaboration of reference level
10
10 Problems: reproducing historical trends The original models’ results indicated a total sink for the period 2000-2008 in the 16 MS considered which is about 25% less than what reported in the GHG inventories. This is compatible with the high uncertainties typically reported for LULUCF. 1. Models results (sum of 16 MS): for many MS the initial models’ results not so close to inventories
11
11 “ Calibrated ” results Overall, for the 16 MS, in the period 2013-2020 models project a sink 17% lower than the average of 1990-2007, due to ageing forest structure and higher harvest rates. Sensitivity analysis: a +/-20% of harvest would lead to a variation of the sink of about +/-25%, corresponding to +/-1.6% of the total 1990 emissions 16 the MS (but varies a lot among MS!)
12
12 Impact of different assumptions of future harvest of specific MS (only for those with IIASA/EFI/JRC projections), in % 1990 GHG emissions (without LULUCF) Impact of assumptions
13
13 Conclusions RL Broad political agreement, intra-EU & international Equal accounting for emissions from biomass and fossil sources Addresses age-class structure “Net-net” type of accounting creates disincentive for wood mobilisation Uncertainties of modelling Cheating possible? AdvantagesDisadvantages
14
14 Implications for EU climate legislation Targets -2° Objective: stepping up of 2020 target? Include LULUCF into EU mitigation commitment? CLIMA report June 2011 –If, how, when? –Coverage (forests, soils)? –Which accounting rules? –Which policy framework (ETS, ESD, new)?
15
15 Public Consultation 1 153 respondents Almost 2/3 want LULUCF to become part of EU GHG commitments
16
16 Public Consultation 2 The majority (82%) considered that existing EU and MS policies are insufficient to ensure that land use activities contribute to climate change mitigation and that all activities need to be addressed via a combination of regional, MS and EU policies (63%)
17
17 Member States 1 14 MS responded, same questions, similar trends with a few exceptions:
18
18 Public consultation http://ec.europa.eu/clima/events/0029/final_report_en.pdf Summary: http://ec.europa.eu/clima/events/0029/responses_en.pdf
19
19 Stakeholder conference 28/1/2011 Follows up from ECCP working group MS, NGOs, economic sectors, academia http://ec.europa.eu/clima/events/0029/index_en.htm http://ec.europa.eu/clima/events/0029/index_en.htm No clearly emerging “simple” solution LULUCF inclusion desirable in the long run Policy framework: ESD or stand-alone framework
20
20 Thank you for further questions: andreas.gumbert@ec.europa.eu
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.