The role and need for space-based forest biomass-related measurements in environmental management and policy
The achievement of international goals and national commitments related to forest conservation and management, climate change, and sustainable development requires credible, accurate, and reliable monitoring of stocks and changes in forest biomass and carbon. Most prominently, the Paris Agreement on Climate Change and the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals in particular require data on biomass to monitor progress. Unprecedented opportunities to provide forest biomass data are created by a series of upcoming space-based missions, many of which provide open data targeted at large areas and better spatial resolution biomass monitoring than has previously been achieved. We assess various policy needs for biomass data and recommend a long-term collaborative effort among
forest biomass data producers and users to meet these needs. A gap remains, however, between what can be achieved in the research domain and what is required to support policy making and meet reporting requirements. There is no single biomass dataset that serves
all users in terms of definition and type of biomass measurement, geographic area, and uncertainty requirements, and whether there is need for the most recent up-to-date biomass estimate or a long-term biomass trend. The research and user communities should embrace
the potential strength of the multitude of upcoming missions in combination to provide for these varying needs and to ensure continuity for long-term data provision which one-off research missions cannot provide. International coordination bodies such as Global Forest Observations Initiative (GFOI), Committee on Earth Observation Satellites (CEOS), and Global Observation of Forest Cover and Land Dynamics (GOFC‐GOLD) will be integral in addressing these issues in a way that fulfils these needs in a timely fashion. Further coordination
work should particularly look into how space-based data can be better linked with field reference data sources such as forest plot networks, and there is also a need to ensure that reference data cover a range of forest types, management regimes, and disturbance
regimes worldwide.
HEROLD Martin;
CARTER Sarah;
AVITABILE Valerio;
ESPEJO Andres;
JONCKHEERE Inge;
LUCAS Richard;
MCROBERTS Ronald;
NAESSET Erik;
NIGHTINGALE Joanne;
PETERSEN Rachel;
REICHE Johannes;
ROMIJN Erika;
ROSENQVIST Ake;
ROZENDAAL Danae;
SEIFERT Frank Martin;
SANZ SANCHEZ Maria;
DE SY Veronique;
2019-07-25
SPRINGER
JRC112994
0169-3298 (online),
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10712-019-09510-6,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC112994,
10.1007/s10712-019-09510-6 (online),
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