Projection of the future EU forest CO2 sink as affected by recent bioenergy policies using two advanced forest management models

Forests of the European Union (EU) have been intensively managed for decades, and they have formed a significant sink for carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere over the past 50 years. The reasons for this behavior are multiple, among them are: forest aging, area expansion, increasing plant produc...

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Autores principales: Böttcher, Hannes, Verkerk, Pieter Johannes, Gusti, Mykola, Havlík, Petr, Grassi, Giacomo
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wiley 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129430
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author Böttcher, Hannes
Verkerk, Pieter Johannes
Gusti, Mykola
Havlík, Petr
Grassi, Giacomo
author_browse Böttcher, Hannes
Grassi, Giacomo
Gusti, Mykola
Havlík, Petr
Verkerk, Pieter Johannes
author_facet Böttcher, Hannes
Verkerk, Pieter Johannes
Gusti, Mykola
Havlík, Petr
Grassi, Giacomo
author_sort Böttcher, Hannes
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Forests of the European Union (EU) have been intensively managed for decades, and they have formed a significant sink for carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere over the past 50 years. The reasons for this behavior are multiple, among them are: forest aging, area expansion, increasing plant productivity due to environmental changes of many kinds, and, most importantly, the growth rates of European forest having been higher than harvest rates. EU countries have agreed to reduce total emissions of GHG by 20% in 2020 compared to 1990, excluding the forest sink.A relevant question for climate policy is: how long will the current sink of EU forests be maintained in the near future? And could it be affected by other mitigation measures such as bioenergy? In this article we assess tradeoffs of bioenergy use and carbon sequestration at large scale and describe results of the comparison of two advanced forest management models that are used to project CO2 emissions and removals from EU forests until 2030. EFISCEN, a detailed statistical matrix model and G4M, a geographically explicit economic forestry model, use scenarios of future harvest rates and forest growth information to estimate the future carbon balance of forest biomass. Two scenarios were assessed: the EU baseline scenario and the EU reference scenario (including additional bioenergy and climate policies).Our projections suggest a significant decline of the sink until 2030 in the baseline scenario of about 25–40% (or 65–125 Mt CO2) compared to the models’ 2010 estimate. Including additional bioenergy targets of EU member states has an effect on the development of this sink, which is not accounted in the EU emission reduction target. A sensitivity analysis was performed on the role of future wood demand and proved the importance of this driver for the future sink development.
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spelling CGSpace1294302025-12-08T09:54:28Z Projection of the future EU forest CO2 sink as affected by recent bioenergy policies using two advanced forest management models Böttcher, Hannes Verkerk, Pieter Johannes Gusti, Mykola Havlík, Petr Grassi, Giacomo policies forest management models management bioenergy Forests of the European Union (EU) have been intensively managed for decades, and they have formed a significant sink for carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere over the past 50 years. The reasons for this behavior are multiple, among them are: forest aging, area expansion, increasing plant productivity due to environmental changes of many kinds, and, most importantly, the growth rates of European forest having been higher than harvest rates. EU countries have agreed to reduce total emissions of GHG by 20% in 2020 compared to 1990, excluding the forest sink.A relevant question for climate policy is: how long will the current sink of EU forests be maintained in the near future? And could it be affected by other mitigation measures such as bioenergy? In this article we assess tradeoffs of bioenergy use and carbon sequestration at large scale and describe results of the comparison of two advanced forest management models that are used to project CO2 emissions and removals from EU forests until 2030. EFISCEN, a detailed statistical matrix model and G4M, a geographically explicit economic forestry model, use scenarios of future harvest rates and forest growth information to estimate the future carbon balance of forest biomass. Two scenarios were assessed: the EU baseline scenario and the EU reference scenario (including additional bioenergy and climate policies).Our projections suggest a significant decline of the sink until 2030 in the baseline scenario of about 25–40% (or 65–125 Mt CO2) compared to the models’ 2010 estimate. Including additional bioenergy targets of EU member states has an effect on the development of this sink, which is not accounted in the EU emission reduction target. A sensitivity analysis was performed on the role of future wood demand and proved the importance of this driver for the future sink development. 2012-11 2023-03-10T14:35:06Z 2023-03-10T14:35:06Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129430 en Open Access Wiley Böttcher, Hannes; Verkerk, Pieter Johannes; Gusti, Mykola; Havlík, Petr; Grassi, Giacomo. 2012. Projection of the future EU forest CO2 sink as affected by recent bioenergy policies using two advanced forest management models. GCB Bioenergy 4: 773-783
spellingShingle policies
forest management
models
management
bioenergy
Böttcher, Hannes
Verkerk, Pieter Johannes
Gusti, Mykola
Havlík, Petr
Grassi, Giacomo
Projection of the future EU forest CO2 sink as affected by recent bioenergy policies using two advanced forest management models
title Projection of the future EU forest CO2 sink as affected by recent bioenergy policies using two advanced forest management models
title_full Projection of the future EU forest CO2 sink as affected by recent bioenergy policies using two advanced forest management models
title_fullStr Projection of the future EU forest CO2 sink as affected by recent bioenergy policies using two advanced forest management models
title_full_unstemmed Projection of the future EU forest CO2 sink as affected by recent bioenergy policies using two advanced forest management models
title_short Projection of the future EU forest CO2 sink as affected by recent bioenergy policies using two advanced forest management models
title_sort projection of the future eu forest co2 sink as affected by recent bioenergy policies using two advanced forest management models
topic policies
forest management
models
management
bioenergy
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129430
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