Indonesian forestry faces a major challenge – meeting the nation’s wood supply needs at the same time it seeks to reduce net greenhouse gas emissions. Meeting these two goals simultaneously requires actions that will increase legal wood supplies or reduce demand for forest products. The options to increase legal wood supply are limited to either growing planted forest trees – either on state or private lands – or increasing production from natural forests. To have a net emissions reduction benefit while increasing carbon stocks from either of these actions is difficult – unless plantations are established on low carbon stock areas. These dual-purpose plantations can conceptually meet the additionality tests required for all of the current forest carbon registration standards. They are on sites that are not currently planted for reasons that are generally easily defined and present net carbon benefits, particularly when soil carbon and below-ground biomass is included. Degraded land sites that have not been planted are most often too costly or too risky – costs that might be overcome by carbon project revenues.
详细
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文件日期
2010/01/01
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文件类型
工作文件
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报告号
115160
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卷号
1
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Total Volume(s)
1
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国家
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地区
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发布日期
2017/05/22
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Disclosure Status
Disclosed
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文件名称
Using climate change revenues to grow more wood and reduce net carbon emissions : dual-purpose forest plantations
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关键词
united nations framework convention on climate change;degraded lands;Internal rate of return;Reducing Emissions from Deforestation;carbon revenue;climate change mitigation;wood supply;return on investment;plantation development;emissions reduction target;industrial forest plantation;community development program;natural forest management;greenhouse gas emission;reductions in demand;hectares of land;demand for wood;source of revenue;demand for timber;reduction in emission;soil bulk density;project revenue;Cash flow;wood fiber;increased revenue;soil fertility;timber plantation;illegal logging;carbon price;carbon stock;
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