Litcius/Paper detail

Impacts of California’s climate-relevant land use policy scenarios on terrestrial carbon emissions (CO<sub>2</sub> and CH<sub>4</sub>) and wildfire risk

Maegen Simmonds, Alan Di Vittorio, Claire Jahns, Emma L. Johnston, Andrew D. Jones, Peter Nico

2020Environmental Research Letters37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Land-use and -cover change (LUCC) is globally important to climate change mitigation. However, using land-based strategies to support aggressive subnational greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets is challenging due to competing land use priorities and uncertainty in ecosystem carbon dynamics and climate change effects. We used the California natural and working lands carbon and greenhouse gas model to quantify the direct ecosystem carbon emissions (CO _2 and CH _4 ) impacts, trade-offs, and climate change interactions of two policy scenarios identified by the State of California for fulfilling multiple land use goals, including the competing goals of mitigating wildfire severity and landscape carbon emissions, among others. Here we show that emissions from desired forest management to reduce the amount of combustible biomass (fuel reduction) initially outweighed emissions reductions from other strategies (e.g. less intensive forest management, restoration, land conservation); however, avoided emissions and enhanced carbon sequestration from the other strategies gradually outweighed fuel reduction emissions. Thus, in jurisdictions with large-scale wildfire mitigation goals, practices that reduce emissions and/or increase carbon sequestration can simultaneously offset fuel reduction emissions. Our analysis highlights the complexities inherent in LUCC planning, underscoring the need for governments to begin the task now.

Topics & Concepts

Greenhouse gasEnvironmental scienceClimate change mitigationClimate changeCarbon sequestrationLand useLand use, land-use change and forestryCarbon offsetLand managementEnvironmental protectionEnvironmental resource managementNatural resource economicsCarbon dioxideEcologyBiologyEconomicsFire effects on ecosystemsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas DynamicsPlant Water Relations and Carbon Dynamics