The carbon costs of global wood harvests
World Resources Institute · Princeton University
Abstract
Abstract After agriculture, wood harvest is the human activity that has most reduced the storage of carbon in vegetation and soils 1,2 . Although felled wood releases carbon to the atmosphere in various steps, the fact that growing trees absorb carbon has led to different carbon-accounting approaches for wood use, producing widely varying estimates of carbon costs. Many approaches give the impression of low, zero or even negative greenhouse gas emissions from wood harvests because, in different ways, they offset carbon losses from new harvests with carbon sequestration from growth of broad forest areas 3,4 . Attributing this sequestration to new harvests is inappropriate because this other forest growth would…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 30.41
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 51
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Greenhouse gas
- Carbon sequestration
- Environmental science
- Carbon offset
- Climate change
- Carbon accounting
- Atmospheric carbon cycle
- Carbon fibers