Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGodwin Patterson Modified over 9 years ago
1
CarboInvent: Methods for quantifying forest carbon budgets B. Schlamadinger & W. Galinski 3. USDA Symposium on GHGs in Agric. and Forestry Baltimore, 21-22 March, 2005 www.joanneum.at/CarboInvent
2
Forests in the Kyoto Protocol Afforestation, Reforestation, Deforestation Forest Management IPCC Good Practice Guidance LULUCF A) Detect lands subject to these activities B) Estimate C stock changes and GHG emissions on these lands Projects (JI, CDM)
3
CarboInvent Multi-source inventory methods for quantifying carbon stocks and stock changes in European Forests 14 participants, 10 countries November 2002 - October 2005 Joanneum Research Austria (coordination) EFIFinland JRCEuropean Community University College DublinIreland METLAFinland Inst Forest Ecosystem ResCzech Republic PIKGermany Hung. Forest Res InstHungary Ghent UnivBelgium Fed Forest Res InstAustria Swed Univ of Agr SciSweden Univ of HamburgGermany CREAFSpain Univ of PaduaItaly
4
Objectives Identify / develop / test methods for improved estimates of C stock changes for UNFCCC and KP reporting establish database of BEFs and biomass equations for major EU forest types develop methods for soil C assessment to be combined with forest inventories over large spatial scales develop multi-source (RS, soils, forest inventory) methods for assessing C stock changes including their regional distribution and uncertainties apply in test sites and suggest upscaling methods to national level
5
Biomass expansion factors at stand level Database: in preparation BEF
6
Results – biomass estimation www.metla.fi/hanke/3306/tietokanta.htm
7
Carbon stocks in Swedish forest soils and its relation to site factors Brussels, February 23 2005. Erlandsson, M., Olsson, M., Van Ranst, E and Lundin, L.
8
Test country Sweden: Purpose
9
Increase in soil C from north to south
10
Remote sensing applications Stratification K Nearest Neighbours (kNN) Method Interpolation / extrapolation of forest inventories with time Mapping aerial extent of severe damages Monitoring Afforestation / Reforestation / Deforestation (Direct estimation of biomass carbon stocks)
11
Classification of Remote Sensing Imagery Example: Forest Area
12
Disturbances (feed into both bottom-up and top-down approaches) Windthrow Ground view
13
Disturbances (feed into both bottom-up and top-down approaches) RS view
15
Errors of source data and models Errors of living biomasses by component Errors of biomass turnover rates Errors in the amounts of litter for three different litter types (input to soil model) Errors related to the parameters in the soil model Inventory data Dry wood density Biomass allocation Carbon content Drain from EFISCEN Errors of drain biomass (harvest residues) Result distributions for the amount of soil carbon, changes in carbon, soil respiration Result distribution for biomass carbon Results – Top-down approach Uncertainty analysis
16
Uncertainty of 1990 biomass carbon stock Uncertainty of biomass carbon sink 2010- 1990 Uncertainty of carbon stock and stock change estimates for Finland. CV%=2.12 CV%=25.1 Vilén, T, Peltoniemi, M. & Meyer, J. Comparable uncertainty estimates of stocks and long-term sinks of biomass and soil carbon in an inventory based method combining a soil model for some European countries. Manuscript in preparation. Results – Top-down approach 640 MtC 720 MtC 50 MtC150 MtC
17
“Bottom-up” Integration Plot data Soil data BEF (field and default) Carbon estimates (without soil) per plot Remote Sensing Carbon Budget
18
Test sites
19
Joint Implementation projects
20
Results – CDM: Keep it simple!
21
Linking temporary credits to emissions trading CDM projects result in temporary credits Not exchangeable with other emissions allowances Separate the liability from credit Combine with the later part of credit stream from “energy projects” Objective: facilitate linking of sinks offset projects with EU Emissions Trading System
22
Workshop, May 2-4 Graz / Austria Land-use Related Choices under the Kyoto Protocol Obligations, Options and Methodologies for Defining “Forest” and for Selecting Activities under Kyoto Protocol Article 3.4
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.