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Gordon Smith April 6-9, 2009 5th Forestry and Agriculture Greenhouse Gas Modeling Forum Shepardstown, West Virginia Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

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Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture. Gordon Smith April 6-9, 2009 5th Forestry and Agriculture Greenhouse Gas Modeling Forum Shepardstown, West Virginia. Outline. Concepts, current practice & offset supply implications Needed research and modeling. Outline. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Gordon Smith

April 6-9, 20095th Forestry and Agriculture Greenhouse Gas Modeling Forum

Shepardstown, West Virginia

Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Page 2: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Outline

• Concepts, current practice & offset supply implications

• Needed research and modeling

Page 3: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Outline

• Concepts, current practice & offset supply implications

• Needed research and modeling

Page 4: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Leakage definition

• Displacement of emissions from project area to outside project acrea

Kyoto accounting: Increased emissions within the project boundary

• Caused by project activity

Page 5: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Cause of leakage

• If a project reduces supply of a good without reducing demand, the market will replace much of the lost supply

Leakage greater for smaller projects because no price increase decreasing consumption

• If replacement supply creates new emissions, leakage occurs

Emissions per unit of production may be higher, lower, or same as pre-project emissions

Page 6: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Factors affecting leakage rate• Project type/activity

• Project location

• GHG accounting rules

• Project size

• External economic changes

Example: FASOM GHG shows US forest management large sink or source across recent variation in agricultural product prices

Page 7: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Leakage by activity: Agriculture• Plowing to no-till: Little or none

May reduce yield in some situations, displacing production

• Reducing fertilizer use: Little or none

May reduce yield, displacing production

• Changing fertilizer use: None (possibly positive?)

• Changing manure management: None

Page 8: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Leakage by activity: Forestry• Avoided deforestation: High

• Forest management: DependsGenerally high if reduces harvest

May only shift emissions in time

May be negligible if harvest maintained

• Afforestation: DependsSignificant if causes clearing elsewhere

May be negligible if combined with forest management**EPA. 2005. Greenhouse Gas Mitigation Potential in U.S. Forestry and Agriculture, EPA 430-R-05-006.

Page 9: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Current treatment of leakage• Econometric estimates with cross-

sectoral interactions (EPA Climate Leaders)

• Address specific activities (CDM)

• Ignore (1605(b), RGGI)

• State that should be dealt with, but give no guidance (CCAR)

• Assign flat rate (VCS)

Page 10: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Leakage varies by program

Climate Leaders 40.6%

CCAR (proposed forestry rules)

24%

CCX Not addressed

RGGI Not addressed

CDM Grazing analysis

Florida afforestation example

Page 11: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Rules affect offset supply

• Reducing number of offsets credited increases cost of creating each offset

•Want policies to make actors responsible for their actions

Credit actual GHG benefits

Don’t credit actions without GHG benefit

Page 12: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

When GHG benefit occurs

• Current rules credit forest rotation extension with GHG benefit as carbon stock increases within project boundary

• Leakage indicates GHG benefit occurs when harvesting resumes

Credit actual GHG benefits

Don’t credit actions without GHG benefit

Page 13: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Credit timing effect

When award offset Management change commitment

Harvest resumption

Project years offsets accrue

11-20 35

Tons CO2e/acre credited 19.4 19.4Levelized $/ton CO2, Year 11

$9.17 $31.12

Florida: extend pine rotation 20 to 35 years

6% discount rate

Page 14: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Policy recommendations

• Assign low-leakage activities zero leakage rate

No-till, fertilizer N2O, manure management

• Deforestation fee (not offsets)

Applies to all conversions, including small areas

Fee set according to average carbon stock, by potential forest type and site productivity

Page 15: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Forest management• Determining project additionality and

baseline is problematic

Modeled baseline depends on wood product prices

• Cap sector, not voluntary opt-in

Baseline can be set at average carbon stock by forest type and site productivity, avoiding problems of modeling profit-maximizing management

Avoids additionality and leakage problems

Smaller ownerships more likely to sequester; need to identify how small to set property size threshold for inclusion in cap

Page 16: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Policy recommendations

• If forest management is capped, can assign afforestation zero leakage

Rewards entities that do good

• If no cap on forest emissions, more research is needed…

Page 17: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Outline

• Concepts, current practice & offset supply implications

• Needed research and modeling

Page 18: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Forest management research• US mapping of potential forest type and

site productivity

• Quantification of average carbon stocks, by forest type and site productivity

• Tool for overlaying map and land parcel boundaries to set baseline for each ownership

Page 19: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Forest management research 2• Decadal variation in C stocks at

property scale, relative to average

How long and how far do C stocks go below average because of normal harvest, and how does this vary by ownership size?

• Natural disturbance

How many ownerships go below average C stock because of natural disturbance, how far, and how does this vary by ownership size?

Page 20: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

National-scale monitoring

• Needed for REDD

• Terrestrial C quantification protocols

For all land cover types

Must detect small % change

Must be repeatable

Must be do-able by developing countries

Desirable to be compatible with developed country methods

Page 21: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

“Factoring out”

• Can carbon effects of natural disturbance be separated from effects of human actions?

Used retrospectively to determine compliance with REDD & A1 targets

Use to allocate REDD payments between entities that control lands and national governments

At minimum, inventory “unmanaged” forest

Page 22: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Global modeling

• How comprehensive must accounting be to avoid having to estimate leakage?

What other sectors should be addressed to limit leakage?

Which countries (for international leakage)?

Page 23: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Comprehensive accounting•What land types must be counted to

get realistic counts?

Peat estimated to be 6% of global emissions: how measure area and depth of loss?

Develop inexpensive protocols for non-forest lands

Avoid things like recent Russian claim of a new billion ton sink

Page 24: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

REDD program design

•What are effects of alternative consequences for later reversal of REDD?

Cost in tons of emission

Cost in dollars to meet net emission target

Page 25: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Program evaluation

•What REDD programs work, and why?

• Do soil protection programs enhance soil carbon stocks?

• Do educational programs affect GHG emissions?

No-till, fertilizer management, water management

Page 26: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Model calibration

•What is correlation between actual behavior and profit maximizing behavior?

Necessary for constructing mitigation supply curves

Page 27: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Most important needs• Support comprehensive GHG

accounting

Methods for counting, esp. non-forest lands

Volatility of fluxes

• Address fears of cap on forests

Which landowners have deficits from natural disturbance, and for how long?

Show banking can cover normal management

Climate feedbacks on unmanaged forest

• REDD: effects of alternative consequences for reversals

Page 28: Leakage Accounting in Forestry and Agriculture

Gordon Smith

Ecofor LLC206.784.0209

13047 12th Ave NWSeattle, WA 98177

USA

Thank you