4.7 Article

How the future of the global forest sink depends on timber demand, forest management, and carbon policies

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2022.102582

Keywords

Model intercomparison; Land use; Carbon; Bioenergy; Climate change mitigation; Shared socioeconomic pathways; Shared policy analysis

Funding

  1. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, McIntire-Stennis through Maine Agricultural & Forest Experiment Station [ME041825, 16-JV-11330143-039, 17-JV-11330143-087]
  2. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) [68HERH19D0030, 68HERH20F0281]

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Deforestation has contributed to increased greenhouse gas emissions, but efforts to slow deforestation and regrow forests have turned them into carbon sinks. The management of forests, including aging and silvicultural inputs, plays a critical role in future carbon fluxes and should be considered by climate models.
Deforestation has contributed significantly to net greenhouse gas emissions, but slowing deforestation, regrowing forests and other ecosystem processes have made forests a net sink. Deforestation will still influence future carbon fluxes, but the role of forest growth through aging, management, and other silvicultural inputs on future carbon fluxes are critically important but not always recognized by bookkeeping and integrated assessment models. When projecting the future, it is vital to capture how management processes affect carbon storage in ecosystems and wood products. This study uses multiple global forest sector models to project forest carbon impacts across 81 shared socioeconomic (SSP) and climate mitigation pathway scenarios. We illustrate the importance of modeling management decisions in existing forests in response to changing demands for land resources, wood products and carbon. Although the models vary in key attributes, there is general agreement across a majority of scenarios that the global forest sector could remain a carbon sink in the future, sequestering 1.2-5.8 GtCO2e/yr over the next century. Carbon fluxes in the baseline scenarios that exclude climate mitigation policy ranged from-0.8 to 4.9 GtCO2e/yr, highlighting the strong influence of SSPs on forest sector model estimates. Improved forest management can jointly increase carbon stocks and harvests without expanding forest area, suggesting that carbon fluxes from managed forests systems deserve more careful consideration by the climate policy community.

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