| Literature DB >> 30328011 |
Gert-Jan Nabuurs1,2, Eric J M M Arets3, Mart-Jan Schelhaas3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In June 2018, the European Parliament and Council of the European Union adopted a legislative regulation for incorporating greenhouse gas emissions and removals from Land Use, Land Use Change and Forestry (EU-LULUCF) under its 2030 Climate and Energy Framework. The LULUCF regulation aim to incentivise EU Member States to decrease greenhouse gas emissions and increase removals in the LULUCF sector. The regulation, however, does not set a target for increasing the LULUCF carbon sink, but rather includes a 'no net debit' target for LULUCF (Forests and Agricultural soils). For Managed Forest Land (MFL) an accounting framework with capped credits for additional mitigation against a set forest reference level (FRL) was agreed for 2021-2030. The FRL gives the projected future carbon sink in the two compliance periods 2021-2025 and 2026-2030 under "continuation of forest management practices as they were in the reference period 2000-2009". This FRL was disputed by some Member States as it was perceived to put a limit on their future wood harvesting from MFL. Here we simulated with the EFISCEN European forest model the "continuation of forest management practices" and determined the corresponding wood harvest for 26 EU countries under progressing age classes.Entities:
Keywords: Carbon sink; EFISCEN; European forests; Forest management; Sequestration; Wood mobilisation
Year: 2018 PMID: 30328011 PMCID: PMC6191406 DOI: 10.1186/s13021-018-0107-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Carbon Balance Manag ISSN: 1750-0680
Fig. 1Hypothetical forest age class distribution of a country. The green encircled part are those age classes where under the base period harvesting took place. The biomass associated to these is called ‘BAWS’, biomass available for wood supply. The black part of the bars are those areas that have actually been harvested between 2000 and 2009. It is these black fractions out of the red bars, that together form the management fraction. This percentage is then used in the projection under ‘constant management intensity’ [23]
Fig. 2Development of potential annual harvest (removals overbark) until 2050 under the forest reference level without creating debits for selected EU countries under the three scenarios of the LULUCF regulation text. Orange line: constant absolute amount of harvest, blue line: constant intensity, grey line: constant intensity plus cut off at sustainable level
Fig. 3Development of potential annual harvest (removals overbark) until 2050 under the forest reference level without creating debits for all EU countries (excluding Malta and Cyprus) under the three scen of interpretations of the LULUCF regulation text
Fig. 4Living biomass sink development for total EU26 forests under the three scenarios. The initial sink in 2010 is larger (more negative) under ‘constant intensity’ because the runs start in 2005 and harvesting levels vary for 2010
Metadata of EFISCEN runs
| Base year of forest inventory | Area included in EFISCEN’s FAWS 2010 (kha) | SOEF 2015 area FAWS for 2010 | Net annual increment simulated by EFISCEN (1000 m3/year) | Net annual increment as given by SOEF 2015 (1000 m3/year) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| aut | 2001–2002 | 3349 | 3341 | 27,763 | 25,136 |
| bel | 1997–1999 | 587 | 668 | 4896 | 4609 |
| bul | 2000 | 3646 | 2387 | 16,648 | 14,361 |
| cro | 1995 | 1443 | 1740 | 5246 | 8144 |
| cze | 2005 (2015) | 2712 | 2310 | 27,343 | 20,463 |
| den | 2000 | 473 | 552 | 5035 | 6263 |
| est | 1999–2001 | 2048 | 2008 | 11,047 | 11,514 |
| fin | 2004–2008 | 18,551 | 19,465 | 94,542 | 93,379 |
| fra | 1988–2000 | 13,873 | 15,607 | 102,445 | 82,871 |
| ger | 2001–2002 | 9781 | 10,886 | 104,864 | 118,589 |
| gre | 3595 | 3595 | 4673 | – | |
| hun | 2005 | 1859 | 1729 | 13,308 | 9774 |
| ire | 2004–2005 | 626 | 608 | 6226 | 6677 |
| ita | 2005–2008 | 8759 | 7979 | 33,109 | 32,543 |
| lat | 2004–2008 | 3141 | 3149 | 21,121 | 19,680 |
| lit | 200 | 1939 | 1852 | 10,717 | 11,030 |
| lux | 1989 | 71 | 86 | 741 | 650 |
| nla | 2001–2005 | 360 | 299 | 3008 | 2738 |
| pol | 1993 | 6309 | 8128 | 33,164 | 62,300 |
| por | 1997–1998 | 2027 | 2147 | 14,458 | 18,870 |
| rom | 1980s | 5643 | 5147 | 48,832 | 29,260 |
| slo | 2000 | 1159 | 1139 | 7790 | 9165 |
| slr | 1994 | 1909 | 1779 | 11,839 | 13,465 |
| spa | 1986–1995 | 10,473 | 14,574 | 27,014 | 35,479 |
| swe | 2004–2008 | 22,647 | 20,033 | 119,377 | 96,486 |
| uka | 1995–2000 | 2094 | 3059 | 16,871 | 23,113 |
| Total | 130,213 | 135,460 | 785,524 | 765,560 |
SOEF State of Europe’s Forests [27], FAWS area of forest available for wood supply