Cost of climate change mitigation in Canada’s forest sector

Author:

Lemprière Tony C.1,Krcmar Emina2,Rampley Greg J.3,Beatch Alison3,Smyth Carolyn E.4,Hafer Mark4,Kurz Werner A.4

Affiliation:

1. Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, 606–55 St. Clair Ave. East, Toronto, ON M4T 1M2, Canada.

2. Faculty of Forestry, University of British Columbia, 2424 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.

3. Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, 580 Booth Street, Ottawa, ON K1A 0E4, Canada.

4. Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, 506 Burnside Road West, Victoria, BC V8Z 1M5, Canada.

Abstract

Managing forests and forest products has substantial potential to help mitigate climate change but the cost has not been extensively examined in Canada. We estimated the cost of seven forest-related mitigation strategies in Canada’s 230 million hectares of managed forest, divided into 32 spatial units. For each strategy and spatial unit, we determined forest sector mitigation cost per tonne (t) using estimated impacts on forest sector greenhouse gas emissions and removals and net revenue. National cost curves showed that mitigation averaged 11.0 Mt CO2e·year–1 in 2015–2050 at costs below $50·t CO2e–1 for a strategy of increased recovery of harvested biomass, increased salvage, extraction of harvest residues for bioenergy, and increased production of longer lived products. We also examined national portfolios in which the strategy selected for each spatial unit (from among the seven examined) was chosen to maximize mitigation or minimize costs. At low levels of mitigation, portfolios chosen to minimize costs were much cheaper than those that maximized mitigation, but overall, they yielded less than half the total mitigation of the latter portfolios. Choosing strategies to maximize mitigation in 2015–2050 yielded an average of 16.5 Mt·year–1 at costs below $50·t CO2e–1. Our analysis suggests that forest-related strategies may be cost-effective choices to help achieve long-term emission reductions in Canada.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Ecology,Forestry,Global and Planetary Change

Reference25 articles.

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