Abstract

This paper develops and applies methods to quantify and monetize projected impacts on terrestrial ecosystem carbon storage and areas burned by wildfires in the contiguous United States under scenarios with and without global greenhouse gas mitigation. The MC1 dynamic global vegetation model is used to develop physical impact projections using three climate models that project a range of future conditions. We also investigate the sensitivity of future climates to different initial conditions of the climate model. Our analysis reveals that mitigation, where global radiative forcing is stabilized at 3.7 W/m2 in 2100, would consistently reduce areas burned from 2001 to 2100 by tens of millions of hectares. Monetized, these impacts are equivalent to potentially avoiding billions of dollars (discounted) in wildfire response costs. Impacts to terrestrial ecosystem carbon storage are less uniform, but changes are on the order of billions of tons over this time period. The equivalent social value of these changes in carbon storage ranges from hundreds of billions to trillions of dollars (discounted). The magnitude of these results highlights their importance when evaluating climate policy options. However, our results also show national outcomes are driven by a few regions and results are not uniform across regions, time periods, or models. Differences in the results based on the modeling approach and across initializing conditions also raise important questions about how variability in projected climates is accounted for, especially when considering impacts where extreme or threshold conditions are important.

Highlights

  • Terrestrial ecosystems provide valuable goods and services in the United States (U.S.) such as timber, recreation, wildlife habitat, flooding and erosion management, and clean drinking water

  • The basic approach to defining the impacts of the POL3.7 greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation scenario for both wildfire and terrestrial ecosystem carbon storage relies on calculating an annual difference in projected physical impact values under the REF versus the POL3.7 scenario for a given year

  • More details on historical vegetation, wildfire, and carbon dynamics are provided in Online Resources 7 and 11, with the latter showing wildfire area burned at the regional level by decade

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Terrestrial ecosystems provide valuable goods and services in the United States (U.S.) such as timber, recreation, wildlife habitat, flooding and erosion management, and clean drinking water. These ecosystems play an important role in the global carbon budget by storing up to four times more carbon than the atmosphere (Lal 2004). Climate change will affect terrestrial ecosystem carbon storage and wildfire incidence in the U.S (USDA 2012) This raises important questions regarding the future role of terrestrial ecosystems in greenhouse gas (GHG) emission mitigation policies when considering potential climate change impacts

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call