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FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office
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FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

Dec 20, 2015

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Page 1: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS

Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office

Page 2: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

POLICY CONTEXT

UNFCCC EO 13514 NEPA Draft Guidance Forest Service Draft Planning

Rule Forest Service Climate Change

Performance Scorecard

Page 3: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

UNFCCC

US political commitment to 17% economy wide reduction from 2005 by 2020 (includes LULUCF)

Current interagency discussions on how LULUCF will be included – eg how to deal with natural disturbance, risk

New GHG reduction commitments are under negotiation – likely to have implications for US forest inventory and management

Page 4: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

EO 13514

Section 9: “consider and account for sequestration and emissions of GHGs resulting from Federal land management practices.”

Draft Guidance: interagency team of managers and scientists (will) recommend the appropriate tools, models, protocols, and data to account for: 1) GHG sequestration and emissions from Federal land management practices, and 2) total GHG sequestration and emissions from Federal lands at appropriate spatial scales.

Page 5: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

NEPA GHG GUIDANCE

Draft CEQ guidance: federal land management agencies should consider greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and climate change effects as part of their NEPA procedures.Consider GHG emissions resulting from their

proposed projects and programs in NEPA documents.

Determine whether GHG emissions resulting from proposed actions are “significant” (require an EIS).

Evaluate differences among alternatives in emissions and carbon sequestration potential, as well as trade-offs with other environmental values.

Page 6: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

FS DRAFT PLANNING RULE

The proposed rule specifies that units will monitor “carbon stored in above ground vegetation”. Some public comments were received regarding carbon, and the language in the final rule is being developed.

Page 7: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

FS CLIMATE CHANGE SCORECARD Mitigation is 1 of 4 dimensions Carbon Assessment Stewardship

Does your Unit have a baseline assessment of carbon stocks?

Does your Unit have an assessment of how disturbance and management activities are influencing carbon stocks or carbon sequestration and emissions?

How is your Unit integrating carbon stewardship with the management of other benefits being provided by the Unit?

Page 8: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

BIG ISSUES

Disturbance Estimating avoided losses Effects of climate change on

sequestration rates Communicating forest carbon

dynamics Life cycle analysis Adaptation/mitigation opportunities

in restoration of disturbed lands

Page 9: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

DISTURBANCE

Variability and inherent unpredictability at short temporal/spatial scales

Unknown effects of climate change on disturbance dynamics

Risk management

Page 10: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

ESTIMATING AVOIDED LOSSES

Seems simple (but isn’t)

Page 11: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON SEQUESTRATION RATES

Increased disturbance Increased moisture stress Increased nitrogen deposition and

CO2

Net effect – unknown and regionally variable

Page 12: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

COMMUNICATING FOREST CARBON DYNAMICS

Control scenarioBeetle scenario Year

Sink

Source

Year

Years

0 100 200 300 400Car

bon

Sto

rage

(M

g/ha

)

0

500

1000

15001 stand 10 stands

100 stands

Ecosystem Carbon stock change, MT/y

Carbon, Mg/ha

Year

Page 13: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

DIVERGENT VIEWPOINTS

Mutually exclusive strategies

1) Increase carbon stocks in living forest

2) Use forests for C storage and substitution:

• Store C and harvested wood products

• Substitute for energy intensive products

• Substitute for fossil energy

Portfolio of options that are appropriate in different situations.

Page 14: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

LIFE CYCLE ANALYSIS– what are the system boundaries

Source: IPCC 4th Assessment Report on Mitigation, Forestry

Page 15: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

RECLAMATION OF DISTURBED LANDS

Biochar for reclamation of abandoned mine sites

Reforestation after severe wildfire

Page 16: FOREST SERVICE GHG ISSUES AND INFORMATION NEEDS Elizabeth Reinhardt, FS Climate Change Office.

Thank you!