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Published in: Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change 1/2022

01-01-2022 | Original article

Probability-based accounting for carbon in forests to consider wildfire and other stochastic events: synchronizing science, policy, and carbon offsets

Authors: Thomas Buchholz, John Gunn, Bruce Springsteen, Gregg Marland, Max Moritz, David Saah

Published in: Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change | Issue 1/2022

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Abstract

Forest carbon offset protocols reward measurable carbon stocks to adhere to accepted greenhouse gas (GHG) accounting principles. This focus on measurable stocks threatens permanence and shifts project-level risks from natural disturbances to an offset registry’s buffer pool. This creates bias towards current GHG benefits, where greater but potentially high-risk stocks are incentivized vs. medium-term to long-term benefits of reduced but more stable stocks. We propose a probability-based accounting framework that allows for more complete risk accounting for forest carbon while still adhering to International Organization for Standardization (ISO) GHG accounting principles. We identify structural obstacles to endorsement of probability-based accounting in current carbon offset protocols and demonstrate through a case study how to overcome these obstacles without violating ISO GHG principles. The case study is the use of forest restoration treatments in fire-adapted forests that stabilize forest carbon and potentially avoid future wildfire emissions. Under current carbon offset protocols, these treatments are excluded since carbon stocks are lowered initially. This limitation is not per se required by ISO’s GHG accounting principles. We outline how real, permanent, and verifiable GHG benefits can be accounted for through a probability-based framework that lowers stressors on a registry’s buffer pool.
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Footnotes
1
The CAL FIRE wildfire risk map (CAL FIRE 2016) suggests a 0.41% average annual wildfire probability for the Northern Sierra Nevada, northern coastal range, and Klamath Mountains, where all California-based IFM projects are located (CARB 2020a). This wildfire risk map and the approach to use a pixel-average as a fireshed-wide annual wildfire probability are widely considered conservative since a pixel-based average might underestimate a fireshed-wide fire risk. A more realistic alternative to fireshed-wide fire risk quantification could be to use the 75th percentile value or the product of the pixel values.
 
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Metadata
Title
Probability-based accounting for carbon in forests to consider wildfire and other stochastic events: synchronizing science, policy, and carbon offsets
Authors
Thomas Buchholz
John Gunn
Bruce Springsteen
Gregg Marland
Max Moritz
David Saah
Publication date
01-01-2022
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change / Issue 1/2022
Print ISSN: 1381-2386
Electronic ISSN: 1573-1596
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11027-021-09983-0

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