| Literature DB >> 30187146 |
C E Smyth1, B P Smiley2, M Magnan2, R Birdsey3, A J Dugan4, M Olguin5, V S Mascorro5, W A Kurz2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We determine the potential of forests and the forest sector to mitigate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by changes in management practices and wood use for two regions within Canada's managed forest from 2018 to 2050. Our modeling frameworks include the Carbon Budget Model of the Canadian Forest Sector, a framework for harvested wood products that estimates emissions based on product half-life decay times, and an account of marginal emission substitution benefits from the changes in use of wood products and bioenergy. Using a spatially explicit forest inventory with 16 ha pixels, we examine mitigation scenarios relating to forest management and wood use: increased harvesting efficiency; residue management for bioenergy; reduced harvest; reduced slashburning, and more longer-lived wood products. The primary reason for the spatially explicit approach at this coarse resolution was to estimate transportation distances associated with delivering harvest residues for heat and/or electricity production for local communities.Entities:
Keywords: CBM-CFS3; CBMF-HWP; Climate change mitigation scenario; Displacement factor; Forest sector; Spatially explicit
Year: 2018 PMID: 30187146 PMCID: PMC6125263 DOI: 10.1186/s13021-018-0099-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Carbon Balance Manag ISSN: 1750-0680
Fig. 1Maps of study areas for managed public forests within Cranbrook, British Columbia (Timber Supply Area 05) and Dog River-Matawin, Ontario (Management Unit 177), and the locations of these Forest Management Units within Canada (inset)
Study region characteristics, forest inventory information and baseline assumptions for Cranbrook (BC) and Dog River (ON)
| Category | Description | Cranbrook (BC) | Dog River (ON) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Climate | Mean annual air temperature | 1.5 °C | 0.8 °C |
| Forest Inventory | Total area | 1 Mha | 0.75 Mha |
| Management Unit | Timber supply area 05 | 4 W 177 | |
| Baseline year | 2011 | 2010 | |
| Leading species | Lodgepole pine, Douglas fir, fir, spruce | Black spruce, poplar, jack pine, white birch | |
| # Records (400 m2, 16 ha pixels) | 59.1 k | 46.2 k | |
| Merchantable yield tables | Gross merchantable volume (VDYP7) based on site index and classifiers | Gross merchantable volume (Mist 3) | |
| Classifiers | Montane Cordillera ecozone, leading species, ownership, harvest eligibility, growth curve key, pixel X ID, pixel Y ID | Boreal Shield West ecozone, species mix, Forest Unit, silvicultural intensity, harvest eligibility, pixel X ID, pixel Y ID | |
| Projected Activity Data | Harvest amount | 1,292,000 m3/year in 2020 decreasing to 1,101,000 m3/year in 2040 | 513,000 m3/year in 2020 decreasing to 409,000 m3/year in 2040 |
| Harvest methods | 85% utilization rate, minimum 60 year age, eligible stands sorted by highest merchantable C, slashburn 50% of harvested area | 90% utilization rate, minimum 60 year age, eligible stands sorted by highest merchantable C, capture 10% of roundwood for bioenergy, 25% of residues for bioenergy and slashburn 25% of harvested area | |
| Wildfire | 1.1 kha/year | 0.5 kha/year | |
| Land use change | None | None | |
| Harvested Wood Products | Bioenergy from roundwood | Bioenergy from roundwood 0% | Bioenergy from roundwood 10% |
| Milling efficiency 76% of roundwood used for commodities | Milling efficiency 76% of roundwood used for commodities | ||
| Mill residues | Mill residue used for bioenergy 30% capture | Mill residue used for bioenergy 15% capture | |
| Commodity proportions | Sawnwood 42% | Sawnwood 50.4% | |
| Panels 16.2% | Panels 19.5% | ||
| Other solid wood 3.6% | Other solid wood 4.3% | ||
| Pulp and paper 38.2% | Pulp and paper 25.6% | ||
| Infrastructure | Road layers (Accessed March 10, 2017) | GeoBC Atlas: Integrated Transportation Network, Government of BC, 2016 | National Road Network, Natural Resources Canada, 2012 |
| Forestry tenure road segment lines, Government of BC, 2016 | MNRF Road Network, Government of Ontario, 2016 |
Individual mitigation scenario and description of activities
| Scenario | Description | Parameter changed | Parameter value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Harvest less | Reduce harvest area | Harvest area | − 2% (BC) |
| Higher utilization | Increase the percentage of stemwood transferred to products | Harvest utilization rate | + 5% |
| Harvest residues for bioenergy | Increase collection of harvest residues for bioenergy. Residues would otherwise decompose on forest floor or be slashburned | Slashburn area (percentage of harvest area) | − 25% |
| No slashburning | Stop slashburning activities in ON | Slashburn area (proportion of harvest area) | − 25% |
| Longer-lived products (LLP) | Increase the proportion of panels produced and reduce pulp and paper production. | HWP commodity percentage | + 4% |
Scenario combinations (not shown) were created by aggregating individual activities
Collected harvest residues for bioenergy, energy demand and displacement factors for FMUs (forest management unit)
| FMU | Population | Electricity demand (GWh) | Heat demand (GWh) | Residues (kodt) | Selected facilities | Displacement factor (tC/tC) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cranbrook FMU, BC | 47,232 | 1310.0 | 2620.1 | 161.5 | 13 CHP, 10 H | 0.95 |
| Dog River FMU, ON | 532 | 6.9 | 13.8 | 31.5 | 1 CHP, 1 H, 18 E | 0.38 |
H heat, E electricity, CHP combined heat and power, odt oven dry tonnes
Avoided fossil fuels for the harvest residues for bioenergy scenario, where bioenergy facilities were selected to maximize avoided emissions
| Region | Heat produced (GWh) | Electricity produced (GWh) | Electricity exported (GWh) | H: NG (GWh) | H: electricity (GWh) | H: fuel oil (GWh) | H: propane (GWh) | H: wood (GWh) | H: coke and petcoke (GWh) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dog River, Ontario | 11.3 | 4.5 | 26.3 | 6.4 | 0.6 | 0.7 | 0 | 0 | 3.6 |
| Cranbrook FMU, BC | 611.8 | 164.9 | 0 | 234.8 | 0 | 245.6 | 0 | 0 | 131.4 |
| Thunder Bay, Ontario | 116.2 | 34.3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 116.2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Cranbrook | 274.0 | 47.6 | 0 | 260.0 | 0 | 4.9 | 8.6 | 0.4 | 0 |
| Elkford | 40.8 | 0.7 | 0 | 35.7 | 0 | 1.8 | 3.2 | 0 | 0 |
| Fernie | 99.0 | 46.6 | 27.7 | 93.8 | 0 | 1.4 | 2.5 | 1.3 | 0 |
| Kimberley | 101.8 | 1.8 | 0 | 90.9 | 0 | 4.0 | 7.0 | 0 | 0 |
| Sparwood | 13.0 | 0.3 | 0 | 8.0 | 0 | 1.8 | 3.2 | 0 | 0 |
Collected harvest residues for bioenergy, energy demand, transportation distances and displacement factors for community-level
| Communities | Northing (°) | Westing (°) | Populationa | Electricity demand (GWh) | Heat demand (GWh) | Residues (kodt) | Selected facilities | Average transportation distance ± standard deviation (km) and [% paved] | Displacement factor (tC/tC) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cranbrook | 49.51549 | 115.7589 | 19,613 | 292.8 | 5 CHP, 6H | 67.7 | 165.0 | 39 ± 16; [54%] | 0.57 |
| Kimberley | 49.6871 | 115.9829 | 6576 | 130.6 | 1 CHP, 5H | 22.1 | 54.9 | 31 ± 14; [14%] | 0.66 |
| Fernie | 49.50676 | 115.0688 | 4479 | 103.4 | 1 CHP, 2H, 5E | 60.4 | 46.6 | 65 ± 25; [65%] | 0.23 |
| Sparwood | 49.73262 | 114.8919 | 3804 | 73.6 | 4H | 3.5 | 32.1 | 41 ± 17; [60%] | 0.58 |
| Elkford | 50.01225 | 114.9303 | 2520 | 50.6 | 3H | 9.4 | 20.0 | 31 ± 16; [18%] | 0.62 |
| Thunder Bay (outskirts) | 48.6748 | 89.8933 | 129,561 | 1678.7 | 3357.4 | 31.5 | 5 CHP, 1H | 76 ± 28 [70%] | 1.0 |
aNote that not all of the population is within the five communities
Fig. 2Map of transportation distances for cutblocks in Cranbrook and Dog River
Fig. 3Cumulative mitigation for Cranbrook and Dog River FMUs with (a, b) displacement factors (DF) based on FMU-level energy substitution (DFe) and broad end-uses for solid wood products (DFp) or (c, d) displacement factors based on community-level energy substitution and incremental solid wood products for use in building construction. Negative values indicate a reduction in cumulative emissions. Abbreviations: LLP Longer Lived Products, Util. + Res. Higher Utilization combined with Harvest Residues for Bioenergy
Fig. 4Total and component cumulative mitigation in 2050 for Cranbrook and Dog River FMUs with (a, b) displacement factors (DF) based on FMU-level energy substitution (DFe) and broad end-uses for solid wood products (DFp) or (c, d) displacement factors based on community-level energy substitution and incremental solid wood products for use in building construction. The black horizontal line shows the total mitigation. LLP longer lived products, Util. higher utilization, Bioenergy or Res. harvest residues for bioenergy
Average annual mitigation potential in (GgCO2e/year) for each decade, ranked by highest cumulative impact in 2050
| Cranbrook | Dog River | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scenario | 2021–2030 | 2031–2040 | 2041–2050 | Scenario | 2021–2030 | 2031–2040 | 2041–2050 |
| Higher utilization + harvest residues for bioenergy + LLP | − 197 | − 228 | − 257 | Harvest residues for bioenergy + LLP | − 59 | − 72 | − 76 |
| Harvest residues for bioenergy + LLP | − 134 | − 180 | − 217 | Higher utilization + LLP | − 62 | − 61 | − 60 |
| Higher utilization + harvest residues for bioenergy | − 108 | − 126 | − 147 | No slashburning + LLP | − 52 | − 51 | − 49 |
| Harvest less +LLP | − 95 | − 124 | − 143 | Harvest less + LLP | − 31 | − 45 | − 45 |
| Higher utilization +LLP | − 135 | − 137 | − 138 | LLP | − 37 | − 40 | − 42 |
| Harvest residues for bioenergy | − 50 | − 84 | − 114 | Harvest residues for bioenergy | − 22 | − 32 | − 35 |
| LLP | − 84 | − 96 | − 104 | Higher utilization | − 23 | − 18 | − 16 |
| Harvest less | − 12 | − 30 | − 42 | No slashburning | − 15 | − 10 | − 7 |
| Higher utilization | − 46 | − 35 | − 28 | Harvest less | 4 | − 6 | − 5 |
Higher product displacement factors and refined energy displacement factors have been used for each of the scenarios and combinations shown