Abstract

AbstractForest Green Infrastructure (FGI) provides society with a wide range of benefits. Significant climate change mitigation benefits arise outside the forest associated with the use of harvested wood products. These include both carbon storage in wood products and carbon substitution benefits associated with the use of wood instead of more fossil energy-intensive materials such as concrete and steel, or of fossil fuels in energy production. This chapter considers the potential of extending coverage of the UK Woodland Carbon Code to the carbon benefits of wood products associated with woodland creation projects. It builds on previous approaches to including the carbon benefits of harvested wood products under existing carbon market standards. The key recommendations include (1) exploring ways of allocating carbon units between woodland owners and wood users that provide incentives to increase the quality and supply of timber, the carbon storage and substitution benefits per unit of wood, as well as the overall benefit to society; (2) consideration of potential double-counting issues and how these can be minimized; and (3) investigating rebound and leakage effects, which affect by how much fossil fuel use in the economy changes as a result of increased woodfuel use. Depending on the management system and species used, woodland creation projects involving wood harvesting may increase overall carbon benefits once carbon storage and substitution benefits have been accounted for particularly over multiple rotations. Further work would be required to assess whether average and generic values of carbon storage and substitution benefits could be incorporated into the UK Woodland Carbon Code’s project-level accounting and impacts on the levels of carbon credits that could then be claimed.

Highlights

  • Forest Green Infrastructure (FGI) provides society with a wide range of benefits

  • Incentives for carbon sequestration—a process by which carbon dioxide (CO2) is removed from the atmosphere and held in solid or liquid form—on their own may fail to maximize the overall carbon benefits of woodland creation, and they may potentially provide perverse incentives. (A perverse incentive is an incentive that has an unintended and undesirable result that is contrary to the intended outcome.) This could occur, for example, if incentives reduce wood harvesting and the consequent reduction in carbon storage and substitution is larger than the carbon savings from increased sequestration (Valatin 2012)

  • If carbon storage and substitution benefits are not covered, there is no incentive for landowners or investors to consider them in their land use and investment decisions, which may lead to woodland creation opportunities being missed

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Summary

26.1 Introduction

Forest Green Infrastructure (FGI) provides society with a wide range of benefits. Significant climate change mitigation benefits arise outside the forest associated with the use of harvested wood products (HWP). To help inform consideration of the potential to extend the coverage of the UK Woodland Carbon Code, this chapter summarizes and develops the findings of the review of approaches to incorporating the carbon benefits of harvested wood products under existing carbon market standards (Valatin 2017).

26.2 Carbon Storage in Wood Products
26.3 Carbon Substitution Benefits of Wood
26.4 Wider Issues
26.4.1 Double-Counting
26.4.2 Rebound Effects
26.5 Monitoring and Accounting
Findings
26.6 Recommendations
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