Litcius/Paper detail

Climate-Smart Forestry: the missing link

Pieter Johannes Verkerk, Robert Costanza, Lauri Hetemäki, Ida Kubiszewski, P. Leskinen, G.J. Nabuurs, Jaka Potočnik, Marc Palahí

2020Forest Policy and Economics210 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

To achieve the objectives of the Paris Climate Agreement, a significant reduction in carbon dioxide emissions is needed, as well as increased removals by carbon sinks. In this context, we argue that Climate-Smart Forestry is a necessary, but still missing component in national strategies for implementing actions under the Paris Agreement. Climate-Smart Forestry is needed to (a) increase the total forest area and avoid deforestation, (b) connect mitigation with adaption measures to enhance the resilience of global forest resources, and (c) use wood for products that store carbon and substitute emission-intensive fossil and non-renewable products and materials. Successful Climate-Smart Forestry has important policy implications on finding the right balance between short and long-term goals, as well as between the need for wood production, the protection of biodiversity and the provision of other important ecosystem services. CSF thus can provide important co-benefits that are increasingly being recognized as essential for sustainable well-being.

Topics & Concepts

Deforestation (computer science)Context (archaeology)BusinessGreenhouse gasEcosystem servicesForestryNatural resource economicsClimate changeClimate change mitigationCarbon sequestrationEcoforestryClimate resilienceRenewable energyEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental scienceForest ecologyEcosystemEcologyGeographyCarbon dioxideEconomicsComputer scienceBiologyIntact forest landscapeArchaeologyProgramming languageForest Management and PolicyLand Use and Ecosystem ServicesConservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management