Affiliation:
1. Center for Industrial Ecology, Yale School of the Environment, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06511
2. The Forest School, Yale School of the Environment, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06511
Abstract
Afforestation and reforestation (AR) on marginal land are nature-based solutions to climate change. There is a gap in understanding the climate mitigation potential of protection and commercial AR with different combinations of forest plantation management and wood utilization pathways. Here, we fill the gap using a dynamic, multiscale life cycle assessment to estimate one-century greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation delivered by (both traditional and innovative) commercial and protection AR with different planting density and thinning regimes on marginal land in the southeastern United States. We found that innovative commercial AR generally mitigates more GHGs across 100 y (3.73 to 4.15 Giga tonnes of CO
2
equivalent (Gt CO
2
e)) through cross-laminated timber (CLT) and biochar than protection AR (3.35 to 3.69 Gt CO
2
e) and commercial AR with traditional lumber production (3.17 to 3.51 Gt CO
2
e), especially in moderately cooler and dryer regions in this study with higher forest carbon yield, soil clay content, and CLT substitution. In a shorter timeframe (≤50 y), protection AR is likely to deliver higher GHG mitigation. On average, for the same wood product, low-density plantations without thinning and high-density plantations with thinning mitigate more life cycle GHGs and result in higher carbon stock than that of low-density with thinning plantations. Commercial AR increases the carbon stock of standing plantations, wood products, and biochar, but the increases have uneven spatial distributions. Georgia (0.38 Gt C), Alabama (0.28 Gt C), and North Carolina (0.13 Gt C) have the largest carbon stock increases that can be prioritized for innovative commercial AR projects on marginal land.
Funder
Yale University
NSF | ENG | Division of Chemical, Bioengineering, Environmental, and Transport Systems
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
11 articles.
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