The economic value of the effect of weather variability on forest ecosystem services in Sweden

In Sweden, production forests primarily consist of planted coniferous trees often mixed with naturally regenerated broadleaves. The predominating boreal conifer species are Norway spruce, and Scots pine which constitutes 40.8% and 39% of the total productive forests cover respectively. This thesis a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Uwizeye, Jean Damascene
Formato: H2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Economics 2019
Materias:
_version_ 1855572535649763328
author Uwizeye, Jean Damascene
author_browse Uwizeye, Jean Damascene
author_facet Uwizeye, Jean Damascene
author_sort Uwizeye, Jean Damascene
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description In Sweden, production forests primarily consist of planted coniferous trees often mixed with naturally regenerated broadleaves. The predominating boreal conifer species are Norway spruce, and Scots pine which constitutes 40.8% and 39% of the total productive forests cover respectively. This thesis aims to estimate the effect of weather variability and management practices on forest productivity and to calculate the total economic value of forest ecosystem services of timber and carbon sequestration in Sweden. The analysis is carried out in two steps. Firstly, to estimate the impact of weather conditions and management treatments on forest growth using a theoretically sound linearized logistic growth model. Secondly, to quantify the total economic value of the timber and carbon sequestration based on their unit net prices using the static additive model approach. The findings suggest that forest productivity in the boreal region increases with the rise of temperature and the length of the vegetation period. Also, the management system of scarification contributes to the increase in standing volume per hectare. The long-term effect of scarification can last from the beginning of young planted seedlings until they reach high levels of productivity. Accordingly, the increase of weather variability of temperature and the length of the vegetation period on forest productivity contribute to the total economic benefit mainly through the incremental value of carbon sequestration. The total economic value in the base scenario is reported to be SEK 1065/m3/ha. In average, the total value increases by about 11% with a one-unit increase of temperature and around 1.5% with a one-unit increase of the length of the vegetation period relative to the base scenario. However, the value of timber remains constant and equals to SEK 923/m3/ha in all calculation scenarios. In 2018, the economic value of timber production in the entire country constituted 23% of the gross domestic product (GDP). Because of the nature of local weather conditions which vary across different regions in the country, this study could not easily estimate the overall total economic value of both timber and carbon sequestration at a national level. The results of this study provide incentives for future research to use mathematical relationships that could not only capture potential economic benefits but also would optimize management decisions which produce long-term impact on sustainable forest ecosystems.
format H2
id RepoSLU15174
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher SLU/Dept. of Economics
publisherStr SLU/Dept. of Economics
record_format eprints
spelling RepoSLU151742020-06-04T12:17:27Z The economic value of the effect of weather variability on forest ecosystem services in Sweden Uwizeye, Jean Damascene carbon sequestration economics forest growth management practices Sweden timber weather conditions In Sweden, production forests primarily consist of planted coniferous trees often mixed with naturally regenerated broadleaves. The predominating boreal conifer species are Norway spruce, and Scots pine which constitutes 40.8% and 39% of the total productive forests cover respectively. This thesis aims to estimate the effect of weather variability and management practices on forest productivity and to calculate the total economic value of forest ecosystem services of timber and carbon sequestration in Sweden. The analysis is carried out in two steps. Firstly, to estimate the impact of weather conditions and management treatments on forest growth using a theoretically sound linearized logistic growth model. Secondly, to quantify the total economic value of the timber and carbon sequestration based on their unit net prices using the static additive model approach. The findings suggest that forest productivity in the boreal region increases with the rise of temperature and the length of the vegetation period. Also, the management system of scarification contributes to the increase in standing volume per hectare. The long-term effect of scarification can last from the beginning of young planted seedlings until they reach high levels of productivity. Accordingly, the increase of weather variability of temperature and the length of the vegetation period on forest productivity contribute to the total economic benefit mainly through the incremental value of carbon sequestration. The total economic value in the base scenario is reported to be SEK 1065/m3/ha. In average, the total value increases by about 11% with a one-unit increase of temperature and around 1.5% with a one-unit increase of the length of the vegetation period relative to the base scenario. However, the value of timber remains constant and equals to SEK 923/m3/ha in all calculation scenarios. In 2018, the economic value of timber production in the entire country constituted 23% of the gross domestic product (GDP). Because of the nature of local weather conditions which vary across different regions in the country, this study could not easily estimate the overall total economic value of both timber and carbon sequestration at a national level. The results of this study provide incentives for future research to use mathematical relationships that could not only capture potential economic benefits but also would optimize management decisions which produce long-term impact on sustainable forest ecosystems. SLU/Dept. of Economics 2019 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/15174/
spellingShingle carbon sequestration
economics
forest growth
management practices
Sweden
timber
weather conditions
Uwizeye, Jean Damascene
The economic value of the effect of weather variability on forest ecosystem services in Sweden
title The economic value of the effect of weather variability on forest ecosystem services in Sweden
title_full The economic value of the effect of weather variability on forest ecosystem services in Sweden
title_fullStr The economic value of the effect of weather variability on forest ecosystem services in Sweden
title_full_unstemmed The economic value of the effect of weather variability on forest ecosystem services in Sweden
title_short The economic value of the effect of weather variability on forest ecosystem services in Sweden
title_sort economic value of the effect of weather variability on forest ecosystem services in sweden
topic carbon sequestration
economics
forest growth
management practices
Sweden
timber
weather conditions