Assessing the carbon sink of afforestation with the Carbon Budget Model at the country level: an example for Italy
In the context of the Kyoto Protocol, the mandatory accounting of Afforestation
and Reforestation (AR) activities requires estimating the forest carbon (C)
stock changes for any direct human-induced expansion of forest since 1990.
We used the Carbon Budget Model (CBM) to estimate C stock changes and emissions
from fires on AR lands at country level. Italy was chosen because it has
one of the highest annual rates of AR in Europe and the same model was recently
applied to Italy’s forest management area. We considered the time period
1990-2020 with two case studies reflecting different average annual rates
of AR: 78 kha yr-1, based on the 2013 Italian National Inventory Report (NIR, official
estimates), and 28 kha yr-1, based on the Italian Land Use Inventory System
(IUTI estimates). We compared these two different AR rates with eight regional
forest inventories and three independent local studies. The average annual
C stock change estimated by CBM, excluding harvest or natural disturbances,
was equal to 1738 Gg C yr-1 (official estimates) and 630 Gg C yr-1 (IUTI
estimates). Results for the official estimates are consistent with the estimates
reported by Italy to the KP for the period 2008-2010; for 2011 our estimates
are about 20% higher than the country’s data, probably due to different assumptions
on the fire disturbances, the AR rate and the dead wood and litter
pools. Furthermore, our analysis suggests that: (i) the impact on the AR sink of
different assumptions of species composition is small; (ii) the amount of harvest
provided by AR has been negligible for the past (< 3%) and is expected to
be small in the near future (up to 8% in 2020); (iii) forest fires up to 2011 had
a small impact on the AR sink (on average, < 100 Gg C yr-1). Finally the comparison
of the historical AR rates reported by NIR and IUTI with other independent
sources gives mixed results: the regional inventories support the AR rates
reported by the NIR, while some local studies suggest AR rates somehow intermediate
between NIR and IUTI. In conclusion, this study suggests that the CBM
can be applied at country level to estimate the C stock changes resulting from
AR, including the effect of harvest and fires, though only a comparison with results
based on direct field measurements could verify the model’s capability to
estimate the real C stock change.
PILLI Roberto;
GRASSI Giacomo;
MORIS Jose;
KURZ Werner;
2015-08-04
SISEF-SOC ITALIANA SELVICOLTURA ECOL FORESTALE
JRC95762
1971-7458,
http://www.sisef.it/iforest/contents/?id=ifor1257-007,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC95762,
10.3832/ifor1257-007,
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