an introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

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An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects Developing Forestry and Bioenergy Projects within CDM Ecuador March, 2004 Igino M. Emmer PhD Face Foundation

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An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects. Igino M. Emmer PhD Face Foundation. Developing Forestry and Bioenergy Projects within CDM Ecuador March, 2004. F orests A bsorbing C arbon dioxide E mission. Overview of the Face projects. Contents. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

An introductionto the monitoring of

forestry carbon sequestration projects

Developing Forestry and Bioenergy Projects within CDM

EcuadorMarch, 2004

Igino M. Emmer PhDFace Foundation

Page 2: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects
Page 3: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

F orestsA bsorbingC arbon dioxideE mission

Page 4: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

The Netherlandsarea: 5.000 hastart: March 1992

Czech-RepublicKRNAP/NPSarea: 14.000 hastart: October 1992

Sabah-MalaysiaInfaproarea: 14.000 hastart: July 1992

EcuadorProfaforarea: 75.000 hastart: June 1993 Uganda

UNP-Facearea: 27.000 hastart: August 1994

Overview of the Face projects

Page 5: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Contents

• Introduction

• Basic principles of carbon monitoring in forests

Page 6: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Introduction

What is carbon monitoring in forests?

Forest carbon monitoring quantifies changes in carbon stocks in various carbon pools of the forestby repeated measurement

Page 7: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects
Page 8: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects
Page 9: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects
Page 10: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Why carbon monitoring?- Transparency and credibility- Verification (see project cycle)- Compliance versus voluntary

Page 11: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects
Page 12: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects
Page 13: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

• COP 9

• IPCC GPG LULUCF

• Large versus small-scale projects

Page 14: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Monitoring plan

• Contents (CDM EB):- GHG baseline and with-project- Archiving- Nature and quality of methodologies- Remedial measures for negative

impacts

• This introduction: carbon monitoring in CDM AR

Page 15: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Good Practice

• Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Good Practice Guidance for Land Use, Land Use Change and Forestry- Revised 1996 IPCC Guidelines for

National Greenhouse Gas Inventories

- National inventories and projects

• Winrock International and others

Page 16: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Basic principles of carbon monitoring

• First considerations for planning

• Data requirements

• Tools for data collection

• Carbon calculations

• Leakage, risks and uncertainties

Page 17: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

First considerations for planning

• Greenhouse gasses involved

• Baseline versus with-project scenario

• Required frequency

• Availability of expertise

• Costs

Page 18: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Greenhouse gasses involved

• CO2 (1 CO2e)

• CH4 (23 CO2e)

• N2O (296 CO2e)

Page 19: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Baseline versus with-project scenario

• Baseline may become counterfactual

• Plot selection

• Modelling

Page 20: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Required frequency

• Lomax: lowest cost/effort, maximum result

• Carbon monitoring vs research

• CDM AR: 5-year intervals

• Just before verification

• Statistics- Stock changes versus variability

Page 21: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Stock changes versus variability

Project design: COProject design: CO22 Uptake Over TimeUptake Over Time

0

100

200

300

400

500

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80

Time (years)

Sh

ort

to

ns

CO

2 /

acre

1

Page 22: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

High variability + small average change:large sample size

Measurement year

2002 2012

Car

bon

co

nten

t (un

it)

Page 23: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Pre-defined precision and accuracy

• Precision: e.g. measuring a stem diameter

• Accuracy: assessing the carbon stored in the forest

Can be found in the IPCC GPG LULUCF

Page 24: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Availability of expertise: fields

• Forestry, terrain knowledge

• Sampling design and statistics

• Logistics

• Supervision and quality control

Page 25: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects
Page 26: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Costs

• Labour intensive, time consuming: may easily become expensive

• Lomax- Pre-monitoring intelligence- Pilot sampling

• Relation with market price of CO2e

(end of considerations)

Page 27: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Data requirement

• 50% of biomass is carbon (C)

• Carbon pools- Above-ground biomass- Below-ground biomass- Soil carbon- Litter

Page 28: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Pools to be involved

• In principle all carbon pools within the project boundary must be considered

• Only if transparent and verifiable information is provided, pools that are shown not to be a source may be excluded from the monitoring

Page 29: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Above-ground biomass

1 .3 m1 .3 m

1 .3 m1 .3 m

1 .3 m

1 d ia m e te rs t

2 d ia m e te rnd

1 .3 m1 .3 m

tw o m easurem ents

Page 30: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Above-ground biomass

allometric biomass regression equation:

B = a + b * D2 * H

where

B: biomass (kg)

D: stem diameter (cm) at breast height (1.3 m)

H: total height (m)

a-b: regression parameters from the data, depending on tree species and site conditions

Page 31: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Below-ground biomass

• Average below-ground to above-ground ratio for tropical, boreal and temperate forest (IPCC) = 0.26

• Varying little among latitudes (boreal-temperate-tropical) or soil texture

• IPCC guidelines: ‘given the lack of standard methods and the time-consuming nature of monitoring below-ground biomass in forests, it is good practice to estimate below-ground biomass from either estimated aboveground biomass based on various equations or from locally derived data’

Page 32: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Soil carbon

A general formula for calculating soil organic carbon:

 

SOC = [SOC] * BulkDensity * Volume * (1-CoarsFragments)

 

where

SOC: soil carbon stock (Mg C/ha)

[SOC]: concentration of soil carbon (g C/kg)

BulkDensity (Mg/m3)

CoarseFragments: fraction in %

Page 33: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Tools for data collection

Good monitoring depends on

• An adequate land classification scheme

• An appropriate spatial and temporal resolution

• A proper standard for precision and accuracy

• A transparent methodology

• Measures to assure consistency and availability over time

Page 34: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Remote sensing

• Air photography

• Satellite imagery

• Radar

Page 35: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects
Page 36: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Ground-based surveys; sampling design

• Ground-based surveys require field visits for measuring selected attributes

• The way these attributes are measured in terms of ‘how many times’ and ‘where’ is the sampling design

• The sampling design must- prevent any bias in measurements- allow for efficient execution of the work- allow for independent verification

Page 37: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Sampling design

• Complete enumeration

• Simple random sampling

• Systematic sampling

• Stratified random sampling

Precision, Accuracy, Lomax

Page 38: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Sampling unit

• Plot (permanent or temporary)

• Pre-defined constant area (tonnes C/ha)

• Permanent plots:- Better quantification of stock

changes- Independent verification

Page 39: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects
Page 40: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Sample grid

Page 41: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Sample size versus precision level

Page 42: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Equipment

Page 43: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Carbon calculations

• Carbon stocks

• Sample size

• Time intervals

Page 44: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects

Other issues

• Leakage- Monitoring within project

boundaries

• Risks and uncertainties- Assessment- Mitigation

Page 45: An introduction to the monitoring of forestry carbon sequestration projects